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2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

General Information<br />

City/Zip: Oneonta, NY 13820<br />

Founded: 1797<br />

Enrollment: 1,480<br />

Nickname:<br />

Hawks<br />

Athletics Colors:<br />

Royal Blue and White<br />

Home Field (Capacity): Elmore Field (3,000)<br />

Press Box Number (Media Only): 607-431-4495<br />

Surface:<br />

Grass<br />

Affiliation:<br />

NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I<br />

Conference:<br />

Mid-American (2nd season)<br />

President:<br />

Dr. Margaret L. Drugovich<br />

Athletic Director:<br />

Debbie Warren<br />

Web site:<br />

www.hartwick.edu/athletics<br />

Coaching Staff<br />

Head Coach:<br />

Ian McIntyre<br />

Alma Mater: <strong>Hartwick</strong> ’96<br />

Record at School (Years): 54-27-14 (5)<br />

Career Record (Years): 90-55-21 (9)<br />

Office Phone: 607-431-4712<br />

E-mail:<br />

mcintyrei@hartwick.edu<br />

Ass<strong>is</strong>tant Coach:<br />

Jukka Masalin<br />

Alma Mater: Lander ’02<br />

Office Phone: 607-431-4703<br />

Email:<br />

masalinJ@hartwick.edu<br />

Team Information<br />

2007 Overall Record: 5-6-7<br />

Home: 3-1-3<br />

Away: 1-3-3<br />

Neutral: 1-2-1<br />

Conference Record: 2-1-2<br />

Lettermen Returning/Lost: 15/7<br />

* Starters Returning/Lost: 7/4<br />

* - started at least half of the contests in 2007<br />

H<strong>is</strong>tory<br />

First Season: 1956<br />

Overall Record: 538-238-71<br />

All-Time MAC Record:<br />

2-1-1 (1 season)<br />

NCAA Tournaments: 23<br />

NCAA Record: 36-23-1<br />

NCAA Titles: 1 (1977, def. San Franc<strong>is</strong>co 2-1)<br />

NCAA Semi-finals: 7<br />

Last NCAA Opponent: 2005, Seton Hall L 2-1<br />

Table of Contents<br />

Quick Facts/<strong>Th<strong>is</strong></strong> <strong>is</strong> <strong>Hartwick</strong> ....................................................... 1<br />

Coaching Staff ................................................................................ 2-3<br />

Q&A With Matt Lawrence........................................................ 4-5<br />

In Mac’s World ................................................................................. 6<br />

Team Roster ..................................................................................... 7<br />

2008 Team Outlook.................................................................... 8-9<br />

Player Bios ................................................................................ 10-19<br />

2007 - Year in Review .................................................................. 20<br />

Final 2007 Stats/Results ................................................................ 21<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Soccer - 52 Years and Kicking .......................... 22-23<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> NCAA Tournament H<strong>is</strong>tory .................................... 24<br />

1977 National Champions/Hermann Trophy Winners ....... 25<br />

All-Time Single Season and Career Charts ............................. 26<br />

All-Americans ................................................................................. 27<br />

Player Reg<strong>is</strong>ter......................................................................... 28-29<br />

Year-By-Year Results ............................................................. 30-33<br />

Series Records................................................................................ 34<br />

In the News ..................................................................................... 35<br />

Soccer after `Wick ................................................................. 36-37<br />

Mayor’s Cup .................................................................................... 38<br />

Mid-American Conference/Elmore Field ................................. 39<br />

<strong>Th<strong>is</strong></strong> <strong>is</strong> <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />

Founded in 1797, <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>is</strong> a small, private, liberal arts and sciences<br />

college offering more than 45 diverse academic programs. <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s<br />

expansive Liberal Arts in Practice curriculum merges traditional liberal<br />

arts study, personalized teaching, and experiential learning approaches<br />

to emphasize Connecting the Classroom to the World. Add to that a<br />

wide range of off-campus internships, collaborative research, study-abroad<br />

opportunities, and our unique January Term, and you are virtually<br />

guaranteed to be connected and ready for the opportunities that lie<br />

ahead.<br />

A <strong>Hartwick</strong> education <strong>is</strong> a personalized education. With a 12-to-1<br />

student-to-faculty ratio and an average class size of 18, students really<br />

get to know their professors. Professors are mentors who give students<br />

the confidence to succeed in whatever they choose to do. More than 40<br />

percent of <strong>Hartwick</strong> students complete an internship for academic credit<br />

and 60 percent study off campus or abroad before graduating. <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

faculty lead off-campus programs all over the world during our January<br />

Term, allowing students to study in real-life contexts.<br />

Located in the northern foothills of the Catskill Mountains, <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

enrolls 1,480 students from 36 states and 20 countries. Its hillside campus,<br />

with a 30-mile view of the beautiful Susquehanna Valley, overlooks<br />

Oneonta, New York—a small town recognized as one of the country’s<br />

top college towns. Oneonta <strong>is</strong> centrally located in New York State,<br />

equid<strong>is</strong>tant from Binghamton, Albany, Kingston, and Utica, 190 miles<br />

northwest of New York City, and 20 miles southwest of h<strong>is</strong>toric<br />

Cooperstown, home of the National Baseball Hall of Fame.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> has been named a “Best <strong>College</strong> in the Northeastern<br />

Region” by The Princeton Review and a “<strong>College</strong> of D<strong>is</strong>tinction,” one of a<br />

group of colleges known nationally for their engaged students, great<br />

teaching, vibrant community, and successful outcomes. More than onequarter<br />

of the student body participates in one of the <strong>College</strong>’s 17 athletic<br />

teams, and 65+ student organizations provide additional social outlets.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> has a strong financial aid program, which helps bring costs<br />

within reach for most qualified students. Approximately 98% of students<br />

receive financial ass<strong>is</strong>tance. Beyond need-based aid, a wide range of<br />

scholarships <strong>is</strong> available for academic achievement and school and<br />

community involvement. Nearly 80% of students work on campus.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Office of Financial Aid and Affordability works individually<br />

with students and their families to help them find solutions that fit their<br />

needs.<br />

Credits:<br />

Credits: The 2008 <strong>Hartwick</strong> men’s soccer guide <strong>is</strong> a production<br />

of the <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> SID Office. Editor and Designer: John<br />

Gilger, former SID. Front and Back Cover Designs: Pablo Reyes, former<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> player. Photography: Ed Clough, Rob Ferrari (Toronto FC),<br />

Thom Shea (MLS/WireImage), Graeme Truby, Neil Everitt (Crystal Palace<br />

FC), Ohio State Sports Information Office. Printer: MultiAd Sports.<br />

1


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Ian McIntyre ’96<br />

Head Coach<br />

The McIntyre File<br />

Alma Mater<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> ’96<br />

Playing Career<br />

!<strong>Hartwick</strong> went 52-20-7 during h<strong>is</strong> playing<br />

career and earned two NCAA tournament<br />

berths.<br />

!Was a 1995 NSCAA/Umbro first<br />

team All-American.<br />

!Scored 18 goals and handed off 10 ass<strong>is</strong>ts<br />

in h<strong>is</strong> playing career.<br />

!Was named the 1995-96 <strong>Hartwick</strong> Male<br />

Athlete of the Year.<br />

!Was enshrined into <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletic<br />

Hall of Fame in June of 2001.<br />

Coaching Career<br />

1996-1998 Fairfield Ass<strong>is</strong>tant<br />

1998-2003 Oneonta St. Head Coach<br />

2003- active <strong>Hartwick</strong> Head Coach<br />

Ian McIntyre ’96 has presided over the<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> men’s soccer program for the<br />

previous five years and has reg<strong>is</strong>tered a<br />

54-27-14 record at h<strong>is</strong> alma mater. In<br />

h<strong>is</strong> nine years as a head coach, he has<br />

led h<strong>is</strong> teams to a combined 90-55-21<br />

record and one trip to the NCAA Tournament.<br />

In 2007, under h<strong>is</strong> direction, the Hawks<br />

entered their first season in the Mid-<br />

American Conference and fin<strong>is</strong>hed with<br />

a 5-6-7 record, the third seed in the<br />

league tournament and a spot in the<br />

MAC semifinals. McIntyre coached three<br />

all-league mentions including first team<br />

honoree John Paul Boyle ’09. <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

put two members on the all-region<br />

squad, a l<strong>is</strong>t which included first team<br />

selection Liam Parrington ’11.<br />

The Hawks wrapped up their final season<br />

as members of the Atlantic Soccer<br />

Conference in 2006 with an 8-10-2<br />

record, falling in the conference semifinals.<br />

Two years ago, McIntyre coached<br />

seven players who received league accolades,<br />

including player of the year<br />

Tyler Hemming ’07.<br />

In 2005, he piloted <strong>Hartwick</strong> to a<br />

league crown and its 23rd trip to the<br />

NCAA Tournament, as the Hawks posted<br />

a 13-6-1 mark. <strong>Hartwick</strong> posted<br />

back-to-back shutouts over Philadelphia<br />

(4-0) and cross-town rival, Oneonta<br />

State (2-0), in the league tournament to<br />

earn the league’s automatic berth into<br />

the NCAA Championships before falling<br />

to Seton Hall 2-1 in the opening<br />

round of the NCAA Championships.<br />

For h<strong>is</strong> effort, McIntyre was named as<br />

the Atlantic Soccer Conference Coach<br />

of the Year in 2005, and he was chosen<br />

the NSCAA New York Region Coach of<br />

the Year following the 2004 campaign.<br />

While at <strong>Hartwick</strong> he has coached<br />

conference players of the year Edwin<br />

Ruiz ’07 in 2004, and Hemming, who<br />

was drafted by Toronto FC in the supplemental<br />

portion of the MLS Expansion<br />

Draft, in 2005 and 2006. He also recruited<br />

and coached goalie Josh Wagenaar<br />

’07, who signed to play professionally<br />

for ADO Den Haag in the top<br />

professional league in Holland.<br />

McIntyre, a 1996 <strong>Hartwick</strong> graduate,<br />

was introduced as the sixth head coach<br />

in the program’s 51-year h<strong>is</strong>tory on<br />

March 13, 2003. In h<strong>is</strong> first season at<br />

the helm, McIntyre guided the Hawks to<br />

a 15-2-1 record, including a 3-1-1 record<br />

and a second-place fin<strong>is</strong>h in the ASC.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> reg<strong>is</strong>tered a 13-3-3 record (4-<br />

1 ASC) and placed second in the league<br />

the following season.<br />

As a player from 1992-95, McIntyre<br />

was named a first team NSCAA/Umbro<br />

McIntyre<br />

Year by Year<br />

Year School Record<br />

1999 Oneonta State 10-6-1<br />

2000 Oneonta State 11-6-1<br />

2001 Oneonta State 10-7-1<br />

2002 Oneonta State 5-9-4<br />

2003 <strong>Hartwick</strong> 15-2-1<br />

2004 <strong>Hartwick</strong> 13-3-3<br />

2005 <strong>Hartwick</strong> 13-6-1<br />

2006 <strong>Hartwick</strong> 8-10-2<br />

2007 <strong>Hartwick</strong> 5-6-7<br />

Record at<br />

Oneonta State 36-28-7<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> 54-27-14<br />

Career Record 90-55-21<br />

2


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

All-American honoree as a senior. In addition,<br />

he was a three-time GTE Academic<br />

All-American recipient.<br />

McIntyre, who reg<strong>is</strong>tered 18 goals and<br />

10 ass<strong>is</strong>ts, was known as a clutch scorer.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> had a 52-20-7 record and<br />

made two trips to the NCAA Tournament<br />

in h<strong>is</strong> four-year career. McIntyre<br />

scored game-winning goals in NCAA<br />

Tournament wins over Rutgers and Boston<br />

University in 1993, and he led<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> to a tournament appearance<br />

in 1995. The Hawks had a 16-0-1 record<br />

when McIntyre scored a goal in h<strong>is</strong> varsity<br />

career.<br />

McIntyre, who graduated with summa<br />

cum laude honors from <strong>Hartwick</strong>,<br />

won the President’s Senior Scholar Athlete<br />

award. He was the 1995-96 <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

Male Athlete of the Year and was selected<br />

as the recipient of the Harry Mosher<br />

Award the same year.<br />

In 2001, he was enshrined into the<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> Athletic Hall of Fame<br />

in h<strong>is</strong> first year on the ballot.<br />

A native of Basildon, England, McIntyre<br />

started h<strong>is</strong> collegiate coaching career<br />

as an ass<strong>is</strong>tant at Fairfield from 1996-98<br />

under another <strong>Hartwick</strong> alumnus, Carl<br />

Rees ’88. McIntyre also coached the<br />

Region I amateur team to the gold medal<br />

at the 1999 United States Soccer Festival<br />

in Portland, Oregon.<br />

He left Fairfield to assume head<br />

coaching duties for the former Div<strong>is</strong>ion<br />

I soccer program at Oneonta State,<br />

where he posted a 36-28-7 record from<br />

1999 through 2002. McIntyre led the<br />

Red Dragons to three straight doubledigit<br />

winning seasons and was named<br />

Independent Coach of the Year after<br />

leading the team to a 10-6-1 record in<br />

1999. H<strong>is</strong> Oneonta team upset <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

in the 1999 Mayor’s Cup title game, h<strong>is</strong><br />

first year at the helm of that program.<br />

McIntyre and h<strong>is</strong> wife, Jennifer, live in<br />

Oneonta with their daughter Lyla and<br />

their dog Elmore.<br />

Jukka Masalin enters h<strong>is</strong> first year as<br />

an ass<strong>is</strong>tant on the <strong>Hartwick</strong> coaching<br />

staff. H<strong>is</strong> primary responsibilities include<br />

coaching the goalies and recruiting.<br />

Masalin brings a wealth of coaching<br />

and playing experience to the <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

men’s soccer program. As a player, h<strong>is</strong><br />

professional career has seen him travel<br />

to Germany, Sweden, and Finland before<br />

fin<strong>is</strong>hing in the United States. Masalin<br />

has successfully made the transition from<br />

playing to the coaching ranks and he<br />

most recently served as the ass<strong>is</strong>tant<br />

coach for the Rochester Raging Rhinos<br />

of the USL-1. During h<strong>is</strong> time with the<br />

Rhinos, he was in charge of goalie<br />

training, as well as team fitness and<br />

speed training. Masalin also scouted,<br />

recruited, and negotiated with players<br />

from all over the world and started the<br />

professional youth academy<br />

infrastructure in Rochester.<br />

”I am very excited to have Jukka join<br />

our coaching staff and we welcome both<br />

Jukka and h<strong>is</strong> wife Carmen into the<br />

Oneonta community,” said McIntyre.<br />

“He <strong>is</strong> an outstanding coach with<br />

demonstrated leadership skills and he<br />

<strong>is</strong> a perfect fit for our athletic department<br />

and our <strong>Hartwick</strong> soccer family.”<br />

Masalin was active within the Finn<strong>is</strong>h<br />

soccer community prior to coming to<br />

Jukka<br />

Masalin<br />

Ass<strong>is</strong>tant Coach<br />

the United States in 1995. Between<br />

1987-93, he gained international playing<br />

experience as a member of the U-16, U-<br />

18, U-21 national youth teams for<br />

Finland.<br />

In 1995, he embarked on h<strong>is</strong> collegiate<br />

playing career at Lander University in<br />

Greenwood, SC, where he was a twotime<br />

all-Peach Belt Conference honoree.<br />

With Masalin on the roster, the Bearcats<br />

recorded a 60-19-3 overall record and<br />

advanced to the NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion II<br />

Championships in 1996. Currently, he<br />

ranks third on the all-time Lander l<strong>is</strong>t<br />

for career saves with 302.<br />

Following h<strong>is</strong> collegiate career, Masalin<br />

remained at Lander and served as an<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach for the men’s and<br />

women’s soccer programs. During th<strong>is</strong><br />

time, he completed h<strong>is</strong> bachelor’s in<br />

exerc<strong>is</strong>e science in 2002.<br />

After Lander, Masalin served as a media<br />

officer at U-17 FIFA World Cup in<br />

Finland for an eight month period. In<br />

2004, he held various jobs within Atlanta,<br />

GA, most notably serving as an ass<strong>is</strong>tant<br />

coach for the Atlanta Silverbacks for<br />

three years. During th<strong>is</strong> period, he also<br />

was an ass<strong>is</strong>tant men’s soccer coach at<br />

Reinhardt <strong>College</strong>, was the Soccer<br />

Director for the Decatur-DeKalb YMCA,<br />

and was a co-director for the Silverbacks’<br />

Youth Soccer Program.<br />

3


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

One on One With Matt Lawrence<br />

Matt Lawrence `96 has put together<br />

a solid professional resume<br />

in h<strong>is</strong> native England.<br />

Recently <strong>Hartwick</strong> Soccer captain Liam Parrington ’11 had the<br />

opportunity to sit down with Matt Lawrence ‘96 and ask him about<br />

h<strong>is</strong> soccer experiences since h<strong>is</strong> graduation from <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>.<br />

A professional career that has spanned 13 years has included an FA<br />

Cup Final appearance and stints at Crystal Palace, Millwall, Fulham,<br />

and Wycombe Football Clubs. Having worked under several high<br />

profile managers, Lawrence has enjoyed many career highlights as a<br />

player after leading the ‘Wick to Final 8 and Final 16 appearances<br />

during h<strong>is</strong> four years in the United States.<br />

Parrington was excited to put Matt on the spot and also try to<br />

d<strong>is</strong>cover some additional details about h<strong>is</strong> own coach’s college<br />

exploits.<br />

What has been your greatest soccer achievement to date?<br />

Playing in the 2004 FA Cup Final, and subsequently playing in the UEFA<br />

Cup the following year. But I always regard avoiding relegation with<br />

Wycombe Wanderers, in my second spell with the club, as my greatest<br />

achievement. When I re-signed for Wycombe in November we only had 3<br />

points, and were basically dead and buried. We avoided relegation on the<br />

last day of the season away to Lincoln City. We scored in the 82nd minute<br />

to win 1-0. The adrenaline rush at the end of that game was like no other<br />

I have experienced. I just sat down for about 20 minutes and didn’t say a<br />

word. The relief was just unbelievable.<br />

How did it feel captaining the Millwall team in the 2004 Engl<strong>is</strong>h<br />

FA Cup Final arguably the most high-profile, v<strong>is</strong>ible game in<br />

world football each year?<br />

Captaining teams has never really been on my agenda, I’ve kind of fallen<br />

into the role on a few occasions. The almost surreal experience of walking<br />

out alongside Roy Keane, with Alex Ferguson just ahead of him, and 70<br />

odd thousand people in the stadium <strong>is</strong> indescribable. It was a great, proud<br />

day, but I think family and friends around me felt more than I did. The<br />

whole day just passed by in a blur. I think you need to have a few big<br />

occasions like that to really come to terms with them, and not be adversely<br />

affected by the whole experience. It’s tough to do yourself justice when<br />

everything <strong>is</strong> seemingly going on around you.<br />

Who did you exchange shirts with after the game?<br />

Nobody. They (Manchester United players) wouldn’t swap shirts on the<br />

pitch, and most of the lads went into their dressing room to get shirts. That<br />

wasn’t for me; we’d just got beat 3-0, and then you have to go scrabbling<br />

around their dressing room for shirts. That was a bit too demoralizing /<br />

embarrassing for me. I kept my own shirt and have that framed in my<br />

house.<br />

Who <strong>is</strong> the best player you have ever played against and<br />

why?<br />

David Ginola when he was at Spurs. He played left-wing, and I played<br />

right-back. He had an aura of greatness surrounding him. I was quite<br />

early on in my career, and I think he had me beaten before the game<br />

even started. That, and the fact that he had two great feet, could take<br />

you inside or out, was strong, good on the ball, great passer, would shoot<br />

from anywhere, had a great physique, and was generally a better player<br />

than I. None of that helped either!!<br />

What has been the most important goal you have scored?<br />

Goals? I don’t do goals. I guess the one th<strong>is</strong> season when I scored the<br />

equalizer against Sheffield Wednesday in the 92nd minute. That goal<br />

gave us a point toward our play-off push. Apart from that, God only<br />

knows!<br />

What would you have done if you had not become a successful<br />

footballer?<br />

That’s a question I’m still asking myself for when I fin<strong>is</strong>h playing. I hope to<br />

embark on a career within the field of journal<strong>is</strong>m, and I guess I would<br />

4


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

have tried that if I hadn’t played football. Football and music journal<strong>is</strong>m<br />

are what I hope to concentrate on.<br />

What did you major in at <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong>?<br />

American Literature, and minored in journal<strong>is</strong>m/creative writing.<br />

Why did you choose to come to America and did you always<br />

intend to return home to play?<br />

I never believed I would be good enough to return home to play football.<br />

If I thought that I would have stayed at home at the age of 18 to pursue<br />

a football career. Throughout my final years in high school I had always<br />

wanted to go to the United States and did not even apply to universities in<br />

England. I was lucky enough to get into the England Schoolboys U18<br />

team and I was recruited by Mooch Myernick ’77 to attend <strong>Hartwick</strong>. In<br />

relation to my pro career, I graduated from <strong>Hartwick</strong> six months early<br />

(Chr<strong>is</strong>tmas ’95), and gave myself until the end of the Engl<strong>is</strong>h football<br />

season to secure a professional contract. If I had not I was going to return<br />

to the US to play and/or do my master’s degree. Luckily enough, Wycombe<br />

signed me in February 1996.<br />

How did <strong>Hartwick</strong> prepare you for a successful 13 year<br />

professional career?<br />

I’ve always said it, and still do, that I learned more about the bare bones<br />

of football from Jim Lennox than I have from any other coach/manager<br />

since. And considering I’ve worked with Kevin Keegan, Ray Wilkins, Denn<strong>is</strong><br />

W<strong>is</strong>e, Neil Warnock, Laurie Sanchez, and Mark McGhee to name a few,<br />

that <strong>is</strong> some statement. I have found that things I learned at <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

have remained in use throughout every day of my football career.<br />

Managers have always said that I’m an intelligent footballer, and read<br />

the game very well. The base for that <strong>is</strong> obviously a natural understanding,<br />

but has been massively topped up by everything Jim Lennox and Carl<br />

Rees ’88 taught me at <strong>Hartwick</strong>. I think the whole <strong>Hartwick</strong> experience<br />

toughened me up, and saw me mature quicker than I would have done<br />

at home (being 3,000 miles away from your family tends to do that!), so<br />

I guess returning home to play football was relatively easy. To get paid to<br />

do something you love; it can’t be that tough, can it?<br />

What advice, from your own firsthand experiences, would<br />

you pass on to young players embarking on a college career?<br />

First and foremost, savor every minute, because it will pass you by so<br />

quickly. A freshman student-athlete one minute to being a graduating<br />

senior the next. Also, learn how to balance your studies with the football.<br />

Ultimately, I considered football the most important part of my college<br />

career, but that didn’t stop me enjoying classes and graduating with a<br />

decent G.P.A. For the international student-athlete, and for me personally,<br />

it was hard dealing with such a short season. The spring was always a<br />

time for me to focus on classes, but also maintain my fitness, and not get<br />

caught up too much in the college social scene. Easier said than done!<br />

Overall, you just have to come to terms with the fact that you are all of a<br />

sudden your own boss. If you don’t want to go to class, you don’t have to.<br />

If you want to go out every night of the week, you can. It <strong>is</strong> important to<br />

take ownership of your own dec<strong>is</strong>ions. So, it’s just finding a decent level of<br />

maturity as quickly as you can; and combining football, your studies, and<br />

the social component of college as quickly and effectively as possible.<br />

And now to the really important stuff… what was Mac (Ian<br />

McIntyre) really like in college?<br />

He was my roommate/house-mate for all four years at <strong>Hartwick</strong>, so I<br />

guess that tells you that h<strong>is</strong> company was bearable. I certainly wouldn’t<br />

have had such a good time at the ‘Wick if it hadn’t been for him/our<br />

friendship. He was my roommate, social wingman, pool playing partner,<br />

teammate, confidante all rolled into one. He had the annoying habit of<br />

being liked by everyone from referees to girls, from professors to soccer<br />

coaches. Specifically as a football player; he was the catalyst for our<br />

successful seasons. He was a great captain and brought everyone together,<br />

fighting for the same cause. Our teams had tremendous team spirit, and<br />

that was very much down to h<strong>is</strong> personality/captaincy. But enough of the<br />

niceties he was also under the thumb of a sorority s<strong>is</strong>ter for a good part of<br />

our college career…<br />

th<strong>is</strong> was pre-Jenn<br />

obviously so he<br />

eventually sorted<br />

himself out. I was<br />

always the better pool<br />

player.<br />

And finally Mac<br />

always tells the<br />

boys that you were<br />

overrated and he<br />

was definitely the<br />

better player. <strong>Th<strong>is</strong></strong> <strong>is</strong><br />

your chance to<br />

set the record<br />

straight…<br />

He probably was at<br />

college. He probably<br />

had the greater<br />

influence on the team’s<br />

success as a whole. As I’ve said he was a pivotal figure regarding team<br />

morale etc. He also scored more goals, and had better stats which <strong>is</strong> very<br />

important in the U.S.! He was in all the teams of the year the All-American<br />

teams and all that jazz. I think I was probably lucky to get into the New<br />

York State team! Not that I’m bitter or anything! I like to think we were both<br />

very important figures in the team while we were at <strong>Hartwick</strong>. You might<br />

need to refer th<strong>is</strong> question to Jim Lennox for the final call. It certainly would<br />

be no d<strong>is</strong>grace for me to say that Ian was the better player....but as they<br />

say, ‘the cream always r<strong>is</strong>es to the top!’<br />

5


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Coach’s Comments<br />

I would like to welcome all of our loyal fans and supporters to the 2008 season and we hope to see many of you back at<br />

Elmore Field. There <strong>is</strong> also no better feeling than seeing you on our travels cheering for the team – we truly appreciate your<br />

support!<br />

Pre-season camp <strong>is</strong> always my favorite part of the year as we welcome all the boys back to campus. There <strong>is</strong> an excitement<br />

and anticipation as every member of the program focuses on the challenges ahead. <strong>Th<strong>is</strong></strong> <strong>is</strong> a time when life-long friendships<br />

are cemented as players commit to the work required to reach our lofty goals. It <strong>is</strong> a time to sweat, a time to endure, it <strong>is</strong> a<br />

time to dream.<br />

We are all excited as we prepare for an important year for the program. The hard work of the past year has helped us<br />

establ<strong>is</strong>h a strong foundation, and we are very pleased with the direction we are heading. We have a difficult schedule once<br />

again that will successfully prepare us for competition in the Mid-American Conference. We are all looking forward to<br />

embracing the challenges ahead as we go in search of our first MAC Championship.<br />

I have asked many of our veteran players to take on greater leadership roles th<strong>is</strong> year. Players such as Parrington, Garcia,<br />

Boyle and others have embraced th<strong>is</strong> challenge and have demonstrated their ability to be leaders both on and off the field.<br />

Our “veterans” are our cultural architects and they are working hard to set high standards for the team. I believe that we<br />

have a lot of talent in our locker room and also a tremendous amount of character. A selfless commitment to our collective<br />

team goals will create a strong team identity and the necessary team culture required to succeed throughout th<strong>is</strong> campaign.<br />

We will need to be focused, determined, and playing at our very best to be successful in 2008.<br />

Nothing <strong>is</strong> more gratifying to the players and staff than the passion and support that we receive from our fans. We are<br />

constantly humbled and appreciative of the enthusiasm and energy that you bring each and every time that we step onto the<br />

field. We prom<strong>is</strong>e to match your passion with our determination and effort, and we are incredibly grateful for your support.<br />

We are constantly reminded of the honor and privilege that we are given to represent <strong>Hartwick</strong>, and we prom<strong>is</strong>e to put<br />

forth an effort that will make all ‘Wick supporters proud. We certainly hope that you are there with us!<br />

Thank you for your continued support and please keep cheering on the boys!<br />

Ian McIntyre ’96<br />

6


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Numerical Roster<br />

No Player Cl. Pos. Ht. Wt. Hometown Last School<br />

0 Jeremy Vuolo So. GK 6-2 190 Downingtown, PA Downington West<br />

1 Joe Gibson Jr. GK 6-4 187 Manheim, PA Lancaster Mennonite<br />

3 Owen Botting So. D 5-11 180 Billingshurst, England The Weald<br />

5 Steven Amaya So. M 5-9 155 New York, NY Martin Luther King<br />

6 Nick Roydhouse Fr. M 5-7 145 Palmerstown N., New Zealand Palmerstown North Boys<br />

7 Brian Gordon Jr. D 6-0 175 Renfrew, Scotland UAlbany<br />

8 Jonathan Garcia-Torres Sr. D 6-0 175 Brentwood, NY Oneonta State<br />

9 Dan Summers Fr. F 6-1 175 Banstead, England Sutton Grammar<br />

10 Wilber Bonilla So. M 5-8 150 Brentwood, NY Brentwood<br />

11 Sam Wright Jr. M 5-9 165 Cornwall, England Bryant & Stratton<br />

12 Jeff Spenard Jr. M 5-9 155 Cicero, NY Bryant & Stratton<br />

13 Sean Buruschkin Sr. M 5-9 155 North Wales, PA North Penn<br />

14 John Paul Boyle Sr. F 5-6 135 Renfrew, Scotland Trinity<br />

15 Nick Pratico So. D 6-0 180 Philadelphia, PA Archb<strong>is</strong>hop Ryan<br />

16 Greg Conner Fr. D 6-2 180 All<strong>is</strong>on Park, PA Hampton<br />

17 Patrick Thompson Fr. M 5-10 165 Candor, NY Candor<br />

18 Evan Doan So. M 6-1 170 Garland, TX North Garland<br />

21 Liam Parrington Sr. D 6-0 170 Woking, England Bryant & Stratton<br />

22 Bryan Pino Fr. F 5-4 140 Greenwich, CT Greenwich<br />

23 Austin McCann Jr. F 6-0 175 Jenks, OK Broken Arrow<br />

24 Tim Daigle Fr. M 6-1 165 East Greenbush, NY Columbia<br />

25 Phil Cartwright Sr. D/M 5-10 165 Tyne, England Gosforth<br />

26 Carson Pryde So. D 5-10 165 Calgary, Alberta Lord Beaverbrook<br />

27 Jayson Sherman Fr. D 6-1 170 Westerly, RI Westerly<br />

28 Dan Buehrens Sr. D 6-0 180 Seattle, WA Garfield<br />

29 Russell Oost-Lievense Fr. M 5-8 155 Westport, CT Staples<br />

30 Michael Cunningham So. M 5-9 160 Dunedin, New Zealand John McGlashan<br />

Head Coach: Ian McIntyre (<strong>Hartwick</strong> ’96)<br />

Ass<strong>is</strong>tant Coach: Jukka Masalin (Lander ’02)<br />

7


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

2008 At A Glance<br />

Since dropping a 1-0 result to Buffalo in the closing moments of<br />

a Mid-American Conference tournament semifinal game, the<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> men’s soccer team was anxious to get back on the pitch<br />

and start working toward its goals for the 2008 campaign.<br />

The prospects of the Hawks improving on its 5-6-7 record in<br />

2007 appear prom<strong>is</strong>ing. Bolstered by the return of two all-region<br />

performers and three all-league honorees, <strong>Hartwick</strong> has high goals<br />

and expectations. But, the task at hand won’t come easy.<br />

The 2008 edition of the Hawks features a nice blend of seasoned<br />

veterans and youth. Several newcomers from last year’s squad not<br />

only successfully made the transition to collegiate soccer, but made<br />

instant impact on the roster. They are all a year more experienced<br />

and a year w<strong>is</strong>er. As for the team in general, it has more familiarity<br />

with what the MAC opponents bring to the table and what it will<br />

take to get the Hawks back to its 24 th NCAA appearance after a<br />

two-year hiatus.<br />

“It <strong>is</strong> an outstanding group of young men who take tremendous<br />

pride in wearing the <strong>Hartwick</strong> jersey and representing th<strong>is</strong><br />

institution,” said Head Coach Ian McIntyre ’96. “The boys have very<br />

high standards and a strong collective work ethic. It <strong>is</strong> a fun group<br />

to work with and I believe that th<strong>is</strong> year we have some well-needed<br />

depth within the roster that will lead to a healthy competition for<br />

starting positions.”<br />

McIntyre sees several key factors in which he and h<strong>is</strong> team must<br />

buy into in order for the Hawks to place themselves in a better<br />

position to compete for the league crown th<strong>is</strong> time around.<br />

“We have some outstanding young talent in our locker room<br />

and as always it will be important to quickly incorporate our newest<br />

additions into the program,” said McIntyre. “For me, however, it<br />

will be imperative for th<strong>is</strong> group to develop a strong identity and<br />

team culture. Collectively, we will set demanding team goals and<br />

hopefully the entire group will commit themselves to the challenges<br />

ahead. It <strong>is</strong> important that our cultural architects d<strong>is</strong>play a selfless<br />

commitment to the team and they aspire to be respected team<br />

leaders. I will be looking for my older players to set the example<br />

both on and off the soccer field. Also, clearly a little bit of luck<br />

along the way would not hurt.”<br />

While the roster <strong>is</strong> full of key returning contributors, McIntyre<br />

also welcomes in a very talented recruiting class of which he<br />

env<strong>is</strong>ions a few paying early dividends to the lineup.<br />

“Our new additions will bring a competitive edge and energy to<br />

every practice session,” said McIntyre. “<strong>Th<strong>is</strong></strong> class has the ability to<br />

impact our team immediately. <strong>Th<strong>is</strong></strong> group already has enjoyed<br />

tremendous success and they<br />

are truly excited to be joining<br />

our <strong>Hartwick</strong> Soccer family.”<br />

“There will be a youthful<br />

enthusiasm, drive and passion<br />

in camp th<strong>is</strong> fall,” added<br />

McIntyre. “We are not<br />

frightened by the prospect of<br />

providing several of our new<br />

additions with considerable<br />

responsibility at an early stage<br />

here at the ’Wick. I’m excited<br />

to watch them develop and<br />

evolve here within our team.”<br />

Jeremy Vuolo ’10<br />

Goalie<br />

Not too many collegiate<br />

programs have the luxury of<br />

possessing two goalie who<br />

each have started a year in goal<br />

during their collegiate<br />

careers. The battle between a pair of netminders from the<br />

Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in redshirt junior Joe Gibson and<br />

returning 2008 starter Jeremy Vuolo should not only be interesting,<br />

but healthy.<br />

“We have two very capable goalies in the program who have<br />

both demonstrated that they can lead our team,” said McIntyre. “I<br />

am really looking forward to watching them push each other on a<br />

daily bas<strong>is</strong>. I have a tremendous amount of faith and belief in both<br />

Joe and Jeremy.”<br />

Vuolo took advantage of an early season-ending injury to Gibson<br />

and never looked back. As a redshirt freshman, he posted a 4-5-7<br />

record and five shutouts during the campaign. In h<strong>is</strong> 16 starts, he<br />

tallied a 1.02 goals against average and turned aside 55 shots.<br />

Two years ago, Gibson started all 20 games for the Hawks,<br />

posted six shutouts and an 8-10-2 record. As a sophomore, he<br />

stopped 66 shots and had a 1.09 goals against average en route to<br />

earning second team All-Atlantic<br />

Soccer Conference accolades.<br />

Defense<br />

The `Wick defense has a<br />

returning veteran presence, but<br />

new faces will be counted upon to<br />

make an impact in the lineup right<br />

from the start. Seniors Liam<br />

Parrington and Jonathan Garcia-<br />

Torres headline the returnees.<br />

“We will see some change<br />

in the backline th<strong>is</strong> year and we will<br />

be working with th<strong>is</strong> group early<br />

on to find the right blend,” said<br />

McIntyre. “We feel that we have<br />

Liam Parrington ’11 some players within the squad and<br />

some new additions who can ensure<br />

that our back four develops into the<br />

foundation of th<strong>is</strong> team. Parrington <strong>is</strong> coming off an injury in the<br />

spring, but will be looking to re-establ<strong>is</strong>h himself as the lynchpin of<br />

our defense. We will also lean on Garcia-Torres for experience<br />

and composure at the back. We may experience a few growing<br />

pains along the way, but we feel that we have the talent to assemble<br />

a dominant defensive unit.”<br />

After having a decorated two-year career at Bryant & Stratton<br />

<strong>College</strong>, Parrington, the 2006 NJCAA Player of the Year, made<br />

immediate impact in the lineup for the Hawks as a junior. In 2007,<br />

he garnered first team NSCAA Adidas North Atlantic and second<br />

team All-MAC accolades. In h<strong>is</strong> 17 outings, he was a stabilizing<br />

presence on defense, while chipping in a goal and an ass<strong>is</strong>t. He was<br />

named to the all-tournament team at the Westfield Cup and was<br />

the Defensive MVP at the Mayor’s Cup in Oneonta.<br />

Garcia-Torres <strong>is</strong> in h<strong>is</strong> third year with the Hawks after<br />

transferring in from Oneonta State. The senior started 15 of 17<br />

contests and gives <strong>Hartwick</strong> a potential scoring threat at defense.<br />

In 2007, Garcia-Torres netted two goals and d<strong>is</strong>hed off an ass<strong>is</strong>t.<br />

He will also be relied upon to serve as one of <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s top<br />

corner kick options.<br />

Three others return to the lineup in Carson Pryde, Dan<br />

Buehrens, and Nick Pratico, however the trio has limited playing<br />

experience at <strong>Hartwick</strong>. Pryde saw action in nine games last year,<br />

making two starts. The sophomore tallied only one goal, but it was<br />

an important one. Trailing 1-0, Pryde banged in a shot off a corner<br />

in the closing minutes as the Hawks fought back to post a 1-1 draw<br />

with arch-rival Syracuse. Pratico, a redshirt sophomore, played in<br />

six games, while making four starts while Buehrens saw action in<br />

8


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

four games. Redshirt freshman Jayson Sherman will also be looking<br />

to make contributions after sitting out the 2007 campaign.<br />

Two newcomers could seriously figure into the rotation as<br />

well. Junior Brian Gordon and true freshman Greg Conner will<br />

also battle for playing time. Gordon, a transfer from Albany, does<br />

have two years of playing experience at the Div<strong>is</strong>ion I level. He<br />

brings plenty of playing experience with him–32 starts for the Great<br />

Danes in two years. As a freshman, Gordon was named to the<br />

America East all-rookie team and all-tournament accolades at the<br />

VCU tournament in 2007. Conner helped Hampton High School,<br />

outside of Pittsburgh, PA, grab a spot in the state tournament. In<br />

2007, he was a WPIAL honoree and a first team all-star.<br />

Midfield<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s collection of<br />

midfielders <strong>is</strong> young and<br />

talented. The addition of a<br />

handful of newcomers<br />

should make fall camp<br />

interesting as far as who<br />

will start and who will<br />

receive quality playing<br />

time.<br />

“I think we have a<br />

talented midfield unit with<br />

some new additions who<br />

will contribute right away,”<br />

said McIntyre. “(Steven)<br />

Amaya and (Michael)<br />

Cunningham are coming off<br />

solid freshman years and<br />

we will be looking for them<br />

to establ<strong>is</strong>h themselves as<br />

dominant players th<strong>is</strong><br />

campaign. We have some<br />

depth within the squad and Michael Cunningham ’11<br />

new recruits such as (Sam)<br />

Wright, (Nick) Roydhouse, and (Pat) Thompson all have the ability<br />

to further enhance both our attacking and defensive options in the<br />

midfield.”<br />

Amaya showed flashes of brilliance as a true freshman in 2007.<br />

Despite only posting a goal and four points, the former high school<br />

All-American caught the eyes of league head coaches en route to<br />

being named a second team all-league performer.<br />

Cunningham also received quite a bit of playing time as a true<br />

freshman, starting 17 of 18 contests. In 2007, he was one of<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s top corner kick options and was among the league<br />

leaders with four helpers. Cunningham sent the Hawks to the<br />

league semifinals by converting the clinching goal in the shootout<br />

over Western Michigan in the first round of the MAC Tournament.<br />

Two other sophomores, Evan Doan and Wilber Bonilla, also<br />

made an immediate impact on the roster a year ago. In the 2007<br />

campaign, Doan drew the starting assignment in eight of h<strong>is</strong> 15<br />

appearances. He scored h<strong>is</strong> lone goal of the year, a game-winner,<br />

in the season opener against UAB, while Bonilla played in 16 of 18<br />

contests, including making two starts.<br />

Two seniors, Sean Buruschkin and Phil Cartwright, look to cap<br />

off their respective collegiate careers by trying to earn more playing<br />

time. Buruschkin saw action in 17 games during h<strong>is</strong> first three<br />

seasons at <strong>Hartwick</strong>, while Cartwright has seen the field 13 times<br />

entering the 2008 season. Redshirt junior Jeff Spenard will also be<br />

battling for playing time after suffering an early season-ending injury<br />

which cost him all but two games. Previously, he was an allconference<br />

and all-region selection at Bryant & Stratton, where he<br />

was a teammate of Parrington.<br />

Redshirt freshman Tim Daigle, along with Roydhouse, Thompson,<br />

Wright, and Russell Oost-Lievense will all be battling for playing<br />

time.<br />

Wright, a junior transfer, was a two-time all-conference and allregion<br />

selection at Bryant & Stratton <strong>College</strong>, while Roydhouse<br />

brings international playing experience to the table in the form of<br />

representing h<strong>is</strong> native New Zealand at the 2007 FIFA U20 World<br />

Cup in Canada. Thompson <strong>is</strong> a 2006 all-state honoree from Candor,<br />

NY and Oost-Lievense was a 2006 honorable mention all-state<br />

performer at Staples High in Westport, CT.<br />

Forward<br />

The Hawks return two of their top scorers from a year ago in<br />

John Paul Boyle and Austin McCann.<br />

“We have a talented group of attacking players and, although we<br />

hope to score from all areas of the field, we believe we have the<br />

forwards who can find the back of the net in big games,” said McIntyre.<br />

“John Paul Boyle <strong>is</strong> entering h<strong>is</strong> senior year and we will look to him<br />

to score important goals for us in 2008. McCann has the athletic<strong>is</strong>m<br />

to make life uncomfortable for opposing defenses and Doan may be<br />

used further up the field th<strong>is</strong> year. Dan Summers joins the program<br />

in 2008 and he will add to our attacking options with h<strong>is</strong> rugged and<br />

aggressive style of play.”<br />

Boyle was the leading point producer on last year’s squad and<br />

was among the leaders in the MAC rankings with h<strong>is</strong> seven-goal,<br />

15-point season. He was credited with the game-winning goal<br />

twice–versus Seton Hall in the title game of the Mayor’s Cup and at<br />

Buffalo. Boyle, who has scored 23 goals at <strong>Hartwick</strong>, was honored<br />

as a 2007 first team All-MAC and second team all-region selection.<br />

McCann came on strong the later part of the year and fin<strong>is</strong>hed<br />

h<strong>is</strong> red shirt sophomore campaign third on the team in scoring with<br />

seven points. McCann returned to the roster after undergoing<br />

season-ending shoulder surgery in 2006. Both of h<strong>is</strong> goals in 2007<br />

and five of h<strong>is</strong> points came in the last five games of the year, including<br />

a three-point afternoon versus Northern Illino<strong>is</strong>.<br />

Summers played last year for Kingstonian FC and posted six<br />

goals in 18 starts. Two years ago, he scored 22 goals during the<br />

2005-06 season for Walton and Hersham’s FC Youth team.<br />

The Schedule<br />

Year after year, McIntyre attempts to put together a schedule<br />

that will challenge h<strong>is</strong> squad and will hopefully make them a better<br />

team when it counts. The 2008 schedule brings several hurdles<br />

that should get the squad ready for the Mid-American Conference<br />

schedule.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> will face stern tests against three non-conference<br />

opponents that gained berths in last year’s NCAA Tournament in<br />

Loyola (MD), Brown, and Colgate. Regional rivals Binghamton and<br />

Cornell also provide their own challenges for the Hawks.<br />

“Each year, we look to play a schedule that will allow us to be<br />

tested and hardened by the time conference play comes around.”<br />

said McIntyre. “We are playing against some outstanding programs<br />

and squads that faired well in the 2007 NCAA Tournament. Our<br />

fans will also enjoy some great home games th<strong>is</strong> fall and we are all<br />

excited to be able to host teams such as Akron and Brown on<br />

Elmore Field. It should be a fun season.”<br />

While McIntyre figures that 2007 NCAA qualifier Akron will be<br />

the pre-season choice to successfully defend its crown, he eludes<br />

to the parity that <strong>is</strong> striking the league and won’t necessarily bow<br />

to the Zips entirely.<br />

“The MAC <strong>is</strong> made up of some very strong squads who continue<br />

to improve,” said McIntyre. “We will, however, take confidence<br />

from our 2007 campaign as we demonstrated that we can successfully<br />

compete in the MAC and we look forward to the challenges ahead.<br />

Akron has establ<strong>is</strong>hed itself as the team to beat as defending MAC<br />

champions. But, overall, there <strong>is</strong> a great deal of parity in the League<br />

and any team can defeat another on a given day. The addition of<br />

Florida Atlantic to the conference only further enhances the League<br />

and we look forward to re-v<strong>is</strong>iting our rivalry with Kos Donev’s<br />

talented team. The boys are looking forward to the trip down to<br />

Florida.”<br />

9


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

John Paul Boyle<br />

John Paul Boyle<br />

14<br />

Senior<br />

Forward<br />

Renfrew, Scotland<br />

Trinity HS<br />

" 2007 Mid-American Conference (1st team)<br />

" 2007 NSCAA/Adidas North Atlantic Region (2nd team)<br />

" 2006 Atlantic Soccer Conference (1st team)<br />

" 2005 ASC Rookie of the Year<br />

" 2005 Atlantic Soccer Conference (1st team)<br />

" 2005 NSCAA/Adidas All-Region (1st team)<br />

" 2005 ASC Tournament Offensive MVP<br />

AS A JUNIOR (2007): Garnered first team Mid-American<br />

Conference accolades and second team North Atlantic Region<br />

honors ... played in 17 of 18 games, making 16 starts ...<br />

led the team in<br />

goals (7) and<br />

points (15) ... tallied<br />

two goals and<br />

an ass<strong>is</strong>t in a 3-3<br />

tie versus Western<br />

Michigan (10/20)<br />

... had two gamewinning<br />

goals on<br />

the season ... was<br />

credited with the<br />

winner in the Mayor’s<br />

Cup title game<br />

against Seton Hall<br />

(9/9) and then in<br />

the last regular season<br />

league game at<br />

Buffalo (11/3) ...<br />

also scored against<br />

then #10 New<br />

Mexico (9/2), Penn<br />

(9/14), and<br />

Bowling Green<br />

(10/14) ... AS A<br />

SOPHOMORE<br />

(2006): Selected<br />

as first team Atlantic<br />

Soccer<br />

Conference honoree<br />

... was<br />

ranked among<br />

McIntyre on Boyle: “JP has added leadership<br />

qualities to h<strong>is</strong> game and <strong>is</strong> an important<br />

personality in our dressing room. We<br />

will look to him to once again demonstrate<br />

that he <strong>is</strong> one of the best players in both our<br />

conference and in the region.”<br />

league leaders in goals and points ... started all 20 games for<br />

the Hawks ... recorded five goals and an ass<strong>is</strong>t for 11 points ...<br />

scored game-winning goals against Fairfield (9/3) and Florida<br />

Atlantic (10/14) ... fin<strong>is</strong>hed seventh in the conference in scoring<br />

... AS A FRESHMAN (2005): Named the ASC Rookie<br />

of the Year ... was a first-team conference pick and a first<br />

team NSCAA/Adidas All-Region selection ... led the ASC in<br />

scoring with 11 goals and 25 points ... was named ASC<br />

Rookie of the Week five occasions ... was named Offensive<br />

MVP of the ASC Tournament ... scored seven game-winning<br />

goals ... netted the game-winner in 2-1 win over sixth-ranked<br />

St. John’s ... scored the lone goal in a 2-1 loss to Seton Hall in<br />

the opening round of the NCAA Tournament ... IN HIGH<br />

SCHOOL: Graduated from Trinity High School ... played<br />

with Celtic, Kilmarnock, and Cumnock Junior club teams ...<br />

was a member of teams that captured two Scott<strong>is</strong>h Cups with<br />

Celtic and Kilmarnock ... garnered player of the year honors<br />

and player’s player award ... was the top goalscorer at every<br />

age group he has played ... named to Pa<strong>is</strong>ley D<strong>is</strong>trict team<br />

1998-2001 ... played with Rangers in Youth Scott<strong>is</strong>h Cup<br />

final and was named “Man of the Match” ... made final trials<br />

for Scott<strong>is</strong>h Schoolboys Team ... PERSONAL: John Paul <strong>is</strong><br />

the son of John Paul and Ann Marie Boyle . . . he <strong>is</strong> majoring<br />

in Business Admin<strong>is</strong>tration.<br />

Boyle’s s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2005 20 48 11 3 25<br />

2006 20 39 5 1 11<br />

2007 17 40 7 1 15<br />

Career 57 127 23 5 51<br />

Dan Buehrens<br />

Dan Buehrens<br />

28<br />

Senior<br />

Defense<br />

Seattle, WA<br />

Garfield HS<br />

AS A JUNIOR (2007): Played in<br />

four games ... saw h<strong>is</strong> first collegiate<br />

action as a reserve in <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s 3-0<br />

blanking of Seton Hall (9/9) in the<br />

title game of the Mayor’s Cup ... also played against Bowling<br />

Green (10/14), Syracuse (10/17) and Cornell (11/7) ... AS<br />

A SOPHO-<br />

MORE (2006):<br />

Trained with the<br />

varsity, but did not<br />

see game action ...<br />

AS A FRESH-<br />

MAN (2005):<br />

Trained with the<br />

varsity, but did not<br />

see game action ...<br />

IN HIGH<br />

SCHOOL: Graduated<br />

from<br />

Garfield High<br />

School ... played<br />

three years of soccer<br />

... garnered<br />

Team MVP and offensive<br />

player-ofthe-year<br />

as a senior<br />

... was a first team<br />

all-conference pick<br />

10


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

McIntyre on Buehrens: “Dan <strong>is</strong> a determined,<br />

committed player who has continued<br />

to develop in our program. A rugged, physical<br />

defender, he will look to build upon a very<br />

strong spring season.”<br />

Buehren’s s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2005 0 0 0 0 0<br />

2006 0 0 0 0 0<br />

2007 4 0 0 0 0<br />

Career 4 0 0 0 0<br />

Sean Buruschkin<br />

13<br />

AS A JUNIOR (2007): Played in<br />

12 games and reg<strong>is</strong>tered two shots<br />

on goal ... AS A SOPHOMORE<br />

(2006): Saw action in four games<br />

and didn’t post any stat<strong>is</strong>tics ... AS A FRESHMAN (2005):<br />

Played in one match ... IN HIGH SCHOOL: Played four<br />

years at North<br />

Penn High<br />

School . . . was<br />

named a league<br />

all-star as a senior<br />

... team qualified<br />

for state<br />

tournament as a<br />

senior ... played<br />

for Montgomery<br />

United from<br />

2003-05 ...<br />

played in ODP<br />

program in 1999<br />

... PERSONAL:<br />

Sean <strong>is</strong> the son of<br />

Bemba and<br />

Catherine<br />

Buruschkin ...<br />

h<strong>is</strong> father played<br />

soccer at West<br />

V i r g i n i a<br />

University ...<br />

Sean <strong>is</strong> majoring<br />

in Business<br />

Admin<strong>is</strong>tration.<br />

as a senior ... garnered<br />

honorable<br />

mention all-conference<br />

honors<br />

h<strong>is</strong> sophomore<br />

and junior seasons<br />

. . . played<br />

for the Crossfire Premier club from 2003-05 . . . team was<br />

Washington State Cup Champion in 05 and league champs<br />

in 2004 and 2005 ... PERSONAL: Dan <strong>is</strong> the son of Laetitia<br />

Ward and Paul Buehrens ... majoring in Economics at<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

Sean Buruschkin<br />

Senior<br />

Midfield<br />

North Wales, PA<br />

North Penn HS<br />

McIntyre on Buruschkin: “Sean has the<br />

ability to compete for a position in our starting<br />

midfield. H<strong>is</strong> strength and composure will be<br />

a valuable asset to our squad.”<br />

Buruschkin’s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2005 4 0 0 0 0<br />

2006 1 0 0 0 0<br />

2007 12 2 0 0 0<br />

Career 17 0 0 0 0<br />

... AS A SOPH-<br />

OMORE (2006):<br />

Saw h<strong>is</strong> only action<br />

of the season in a 3-<br />

1 win over Philadelphia<br />

... didn’t tally<br />

any stat<strong>is</strong>tics ... AS<br />

A FRESHMAN<br />

(2005): Played in<br />

eight matches as a<br />

back ... reg<strong>is</strong>tered<br />

one shot in h<strong>is</strong> appearances<br />

... IN<br />

HIGH SCHOOL:<br />

Graduated from<br />

Gosforth High<br />

School ... captained<br />

a three-time city<br />

cup winning soccer<br />

team ... served as<br />

team captain for<br />

the North Cumberland<br />

Schoolboys<br />

squad ... PER-<br />

SONAL: Phil <strong>is</strong><br />

the son of Peter<br />

and Hilary Cartwright<br />

... <strong>is</strong> majoring<br />

in Economics.<br />

Phil Cartwright<br />

Phil Cartwright<br />

25<br />

Senior<br />

Defense/Midfield<br />

Tyne, England<br />

Gosforth HS<br />

AS A JUNIOR (2007): Played in<br />

four games, making one start ... made<br />

first start of career at Cornell (11/7)<br />

and recorded a shot against Big Red<br />

McIntyre on Cartwright: “When fit and<br />

healthy, Carts has the ability to push for a<br />

starting role on th<strong>is</strong> team. He <strong>is</strong> the consummate<br />

teammate and assumes a very important<br />

role in our dressing room.”<br />

Cartwright’s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2005 8 1 0 0 0<br />

2006 1 0 0 0 0<br />

2007 4 1 0 0 0<br />

Career 13 2 0 0 0<br />

11


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Jonathan Garcia-Torres<br />

Senior<br />

Defense<br />

Brentwood, NY<br />

Ross HS<br />

Jonathan Garcia-T<br />

8<br />

" 2005 Atlantic Soccer Conference<br />

(2nd team)<br />

AS A JUNIOR (2007): Played in<br />

17 games, making 15 starts ... tallied two goals and an ass<strong>is</strong>t<br />

for five points ... scored first collegiate goal against Bowling<br />

Green (10/14) and then connected for h<strong>is</strong> second against<br />

arch-rival Colgate (10/24) ... d<strong>is</strong>hed off only helper of the<br />

year in a victory over Northern Illino<strong>is</strong> (10/28) ... AS A<br />

SOPHOMORE (2006): Made 14 starts and saw action in<br />

16 games ... recorded<br />

lone ass<strong>is</strong>t<br />

on the season<br />

against Penn (9/8)<br />

... PRIOR TO<br />

HARTWICK: Attended<br />

Oneonta<br />

State for two years<br />

before transferring<br />

... only played 2005<br />

season for the Red<br />

Dragons ... was<br />

named a second<br />

team Atlantic Soccer<br />

Conference selection<br />

h<strong>is</strong> sophomore<br />

campaign ...<br />

started all 19 games<br />

and helped the Red<br />

Dragons reach the<br />

league title game<br />

...tallied one ass<strong>is</strong>t<br />

on the season ...<br />

IN HIGH<br />

SCHOOL:<br />

Graduated from<br />

Brentwood Ross<br />

High School ...<br />

McIntyre on Garcia-Torres: “We are looking<br />

for Jonathan to establ<strong>is</strong>h himself as one of<br />

the premier defenders in the MAC. He <strong>is</strong> a<br />

player with strength, pace, and outstanding<br />

technical ability who we hope enjoys an outstanding<br />

final year here at the ’Wick.”<br />

played three<br />

years soccer ...<br />

was an all-league,<br />

all-conference,<br />

and all-county selection ... was a member of a team that<br />

advanced to the Long Island finals ... played three years with<br />

Eastern New York ODP ... PERSONAL: Jonathan <strong>is</strong> the<br />

son of Ricardo Garcia ... majoring in Sociology at <strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

Garcia-Torres’ Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2006 16 3 0 1 1<br />

2007 17 8 2 1 5<br />

Career 33 11 2 2 6<br />

21<br />

Senior<br />

Defense<br />

Woking, England<br />

Bryant & Stratton JC<br />

" 2007 Mid-American Conference<br />

(2nd team)<br />

" 2007 NSCAA/Adidas North<br />

Atlantic Region (1st team)<br />

" 2007 Mayor’s Cup Defensive MVP<br />

" 2007 Westfield Insurance Cup all-tournament team<br />

AS A JUNIOR<br />

(2007): Was a first<br />

team NSCAA/<br />

Adidas North Atlantic<br />

Region honoree<br />

and garnered<br />

second team Mid-<br />

American Conference<br />

accolades ...<br />

was named the<br />

Garth Stam Defensive<br />

MVP of the<br />

Mayor’s Cup and<br />

was selected to the<br />

Westfield Insurance<br />

Cup all-tournament<br />

team ...<br />

played in 17<br />

games, starting all<br />

... posted one goal<br />

and one ass<strong>is</strong>t on<br />

the season ... reg<strong>is</strong>tered<br />

first collegiate<br />

point at<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> in season-opener<br />

against UAB (8/<br />

31) with an ass<strong>is</strong>t<br />

... headed in h<strong>is</strong><br />

Liam Parrington<br />

McIntyre on Parrington: “Liam <strong>is</strong> our captain<br />

and leads from the front. He <strong>is</strong> an athletic,<br />

physical player who has shown that he <strong>is</strong><br />

one of the best defenders in the region.”<br />

lone goal off a corner kick in the Hawks’ victory over Seton<br />

Hall (9/9) in the finals of the Mayor’s Cup... IN JUNIOR<br />

COLLEGE: Attended Bryant and Stratton <strong>College</strong>…was a<br />

member of a 2005 conference-title team and a squad that<br />

fin<strong>is</strong>hed second in the league in 2006 ... was a two-time allregion,<br />

all-conference performer ... garnered back-to-back<br />

Junior <strong>College</strong> All-American accolades …was named the 2006<br />

NJCAA Player of the Year ... represented England Schoolboys<br />

at the U-15 level ... PERSONAL: Liam <strong>is</strong> the son of<br />

Kevin Parrington and Gaynor Chawney ... <strong>is</strong> majoring in<br />

Business Admin<strong>is</strong>tration.<br />

Parrington’s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2007 17 10 1 1 3<br />

12


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Joe Gibson<br />

Redshirt 1Junior<br />

Goalie<br />

Manheim, PA<br />

Mennonite HS<br />

" 2006 Atlantic Soccer Conference<br />

(2nd Team)<br />

sprinter at Lebanon Valley <strong>College</strong> ... <strong>is</strong> double majoring in<br />

Religious Studies and Accounting.<br />

Gibson’s s Career Stats<br />

Year GP GA GAA Saves Sho Rec.<br />

2005 9 7 0.86 30 4 5-3-1<br />

2006 20 22 1.09 66 6 8-10-2<br />

2007 2 4 2.00 3 0 1-1-0<br />

Career 31 33 1.09 99 10 14-14-3<br />

AS A JUNIOR (2007): Played in<br />

only two games for the Hawks before sustaining a seasonending<br />

injury ... made two saves in the season opener as<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> prevailed over UAB (8/31) ... made one save in a a<br />

3-1 loss to #10 New Mexico (9/2) ... AS A SOPHOMORE<br />

(2006): Received second team Atlantic Soccer Conference<br />

honors ... started all 20 games in net for the Hawks recording<br />

six shutouts ... made 66 saves while posting a 1.09 goals<br />

against average ... posted a season-best nine saves in the<br />

season opener against Ohio State (8/25) as the game ended<br />

in a 0-0 tie ... also grabbed nine saves in a 1-0 victory over<br />

Cornell (10/24) ... AS A FRESHMAN (2005): Started first<br />

game of h<strong>is</strong> career, filling in for former standout Josh<br />

Wagenaar while he was with the Canadian National Team<br />

... took over starting role late in the year after an injury to<br />

Wagenaar ... came on in relief to preserve a 2-1 dec<strong>is</strong>ion<br />

over sixth-ranked St. John’s ... posted a 5-3-1 mark in goal<br />

and 0.86 goals against average ... was named the league rookie<br />

of the week after shutting out Oneonta State (11/13) ... posted<br />

season-high seven<br />

saves in the opening<br />

round of the<br />

NCAA Championships<br />

against Seton<br />

Hall (11/19) ... IN<br />

HIGH SCHOOL:<br />

Played four years at<br />

Lancaster Mennonite<br />

High School ...<br />

was a two-time<br />

Lancaster Lebanon<br />

League All Star ...<br />

only allowed five<br />

goals in h<strong>is</strong> senior<br />

season . . . played<br />

with the Pennsylvania<br />

State ODP program<br />

from 1999-<br />

2002 ... was a member<br />

of the Regional<br />

ODP team in<br />

2003-04 ... also<br />

McIntyre on Gibson: “Joe <strong>is</strong> coming off a<br />

frustrating, injury-plagued 2007 campaign and<br />

we will be looking for him to re-establ<strong>is</strong>h himself<br />

as one of the most dominant goalkeepers<br />

in the region. Joe has the ability to pull off<br />

game-changing saves and leads h<strong>is</strong> back four<br />

very well.”<br />

played with Super<br />

Nova FC<br />

from 1998-2005<br />

... PERSONAL:<br />

Joe <strong>is</strong> the son of<br />

David and Helen<br />

Gibson . . . h<strong>is</strong><br />

brother was a national-caliber<br />

Austin McCann<br />

Austin McCann<br />

23<br />

Redshirt Junior<br />

Forward<br />

Jenks, OK<br />

Broken Arrow HS<br />

" 2005 Atlantic Soccer Conference<br />

(2nd team)<br />

AS A SOPHOMORE (2007): Played in 17 games, making<br />

12 starts ... posted two goals and three ass<strong>is</strong>ts for seven<br />

points ... scored goals in back to back games against league<br />

opponents Northern Illino<strong>is</strong> (10/28) and at Buffalo (11/3) ...<br />

also d<strong>is</strong>hed off an ass<strong>is</strong>t against NIU ... ass<strong>is</strong>ted on goals versus<br />

Penn (9/14) and Binghamton (9/22) ... 2006 SEASON:<br />

Redshirted season<br />

after undergoing<br />

season-ending<br />

shoulder surgery ...<br />

retained sophomore<br />

eligibility ...<br />

AS A FRESH-<br />

MAN (2005):<br />

Ranked second in<br />

the Atlantic Soccer<br />

Conference in scoring<br />

with seven goals<br />

and six ass<strong>is</strong>ts for<br />

20 points ... named<br />

as a second team<br />

conference selection<br />

... started 11 of<br />

the 19 matches in<br />

which he played ...<br />

scored a goal and<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>ted on the<br />

game-winner in a<br />

2-1 win over<br />

Brown, h<strong>is</strong> first<br />

collegiate match McIntyre on McCann: “Austin has the<br />

ability and athletic<strong>is</strong>m to terrorize defenses and<br />

... tallied two<br />

we will look for him to re-establ<strong>is</strong>h himself as a<br />

goals in a 2-0 win<br />

premier attacking player in the region. With<br />

over Adelphi ... the necessary commitment and application,<br />

came off the we believe that he <strong>is</strong> a player who can turn<br />

bench to net a important games for us.”<br />

pair of goals in a<br />

5-2 triumph over<br />

Temple . . . twice named ASC Rookie of the Week ... IN<br />

13


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

HIGH SCHOOL: Graduated from Broken Arrow High<br />

School ... played four years of soccer ... was a member of the<br />

Tulsa Nationals Club from 1998-2005 . . . the team won two<br />

state titles ... PERSONAL: Austin <strong>is</strong> the son of Linda and<br />

Michael Gordon ... majoring in Business Admin<strong>is</strong>tration.<br />

McCann’s s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2005 19 29 7 6 20<br />

2007 17 20 2 3 7<br />

Career 36 49 9 9 27<br />

Jeff Spenard<br />

Jeff Spenard<br />

12<br />

Redshirt Junior<br />

Midfield<br />

Cicero, NY<br />

Bryant & Stratton<br />

all-state and an All-America East Region honoree once ... was<br />

named the league Player of the Year and MVP of Section III<br />

Exceptional Senior Game in 2004 ... was a two-time Central<br />

Scholastic Men’s Soccer Empire State Games player ... played<br />

five years for New York State West ODP and was a member<br />

of the Syracuse Blitz, which captured state titles in 2001, 2002,<br />

2003, and 2006 ... also lettered in track and lacrosse in high<br />

school ... PERSONAL: Jeff Spenard <strong>is</strong> the son of Jeff and Julie<br />

Spenard ... majoring in Business Admin<strong>is</strong>tration.<br />

Spenard’s s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2007 2 1 0 0 0<br />

Steven Amaya<br />

Steven Amaya<br />

5<br />

Sophomore<br />

Midfield<br />

New York, NY<br />

Martin Luther King HS<br />

" 2007 Mid-American Conference<br />

(2nd team)<br />

AS A JUNIOR (2007): Played in<br />

only two games before sustaining a<br />

season-ending injury ... retained junior<br />

status with a<br />

medical redshirt ...<br />

saw action in<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s 3-0 victory<br />

over Seton<br />

Hall (9/9), posting<br />

a shot ... also<br />

played against<br />

Lafayette (9/16) ....<br />

McIntyre on Spenard: “After injury forced<br />

Jeff to redshirt in 2007, he enjoyed an excellent<br />

spring campaign. At h<strong>is</strong> best, he <strong>is</strong> a real<br />

handful for opposing defenders with h<strong>is</strong> directness,<br />

pace, and drive.”<br />

IN JUNIOR<br />

COLLEGE:<br />

Played one year at<br />

Bryant & Stratton<br />

<strong>College</strong>, where he<br />

was a first team allconference<br />

and allregion<br />

honoree ...<br />

was named a<br />

NSCAA D<strong>is</strong>tingu<strong>is</strong>hed<br />

Academic<br />

All-American ...<br />

was chosen by<br />

professors and<br />

adv<strong>is</strong>ors at the<br />

college to serve<br />

as student commencement<br />

speaker at the<br />

graduation ceremony<br />

... played h<strong>is</strong> freshman campaign at Niagara University,<br />

where he started 14 of 19 games ... scored a goal and d<strong>is</strong>hed<br />

off an ass<strong>is</strong>t for the Purple Eagles ... netted h<strong>is</strong> marker against<br />

Can<strong>is</strong>ius ... IN HIGH SCHOOL: Was a two-year captain at<br />

Cicero-North Syracuse High School ... garnered first team allleague<br />

and all-Central New York accolades twice and was an<br />

AS A FRESHMAN (2007): Garnered second team Mid-<br />

American Conference accolades ... played in 17 games, starting<br />

14 of them ... tallied one goal and two ass<strong>is</strong>ts for four points<br />

... posted first collegiate point with an ass<strong>is</strong>t versus Seton<br />

Hall (9/9) ...<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>ted on one of<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s two<br />

goals in a victory<br />

over MAC foe<br />

Buffalo (11/3) ...<br />

scored first<br />

collegiate goal in<br />

the opening round<br />

of the MAC<br />

Tournament<br />

versus Western<br />

Michigan (11/13)<br />

... IN HIGH<br />

SCHOOL:<br />

Attended Martin<br />

Luther King High<br />

School, where he<br />

was a member of<br />

two NYC PSAL<br />

Championship<br />

squads (’04, ’06)<br />

... named the<br />

2006 PSAL<br />

Championship<br />

MVP and player<br />

of the year ...<br />

honored as a<br />

2006 Adidas/<br />

McIntyre on Amaya: “Steven <strong>is</strong> a real competitor<br />

with excellent technique and field<br />

awareness. We will look to Steven to stamp h<strong>is</strong><br />

personality on our team and add additional<br />

goals to the team.”<br />

NSCAA High<br />

School All-American ... played club soccer for NY Red Bull<br />

14


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

... was a member of a team that captured the New Jersey<br />

State Cup and the Super Y-League National titles ... honored<br />

as an ESP/Adidas All-Star ... tabbed as a R<strong>is</strong>e.com Top 25<br />

boys’ recruit for the class of 2007... played ODP for the US<br />

Youth Region I Team ... <strong>is</strong> a U.S. National Team pool player<br />

... PERSONAL: The son of Rigoberto and Maria Amaya ...<br />

planning to major in Business Admin<strong>is</strong>tration ... enrolled in<br />

February of 2007 after graduating from high school early.<br />

senior ... played club soccer for the NY Kosmos ... won 2006<br />

State Championship… was a member of the ODP Region I<br />

team and was member of the U-18 Men’s National pool ...<br />

PERSONAL: Wilber <strong>is</strong> the son of Nelson and Elsy Bonilla<br />

and will major in Business Admin<strong>is</strong>tration.<br />

Bonilla’s s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2007 16 3 0 1 1<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2007 17 17 1 2 4<br />

Wilber Bonilla<br />

10<br />

AS A FRESHMAN (2007): Played<br />

in 16 of 17 games, making two starts<br />

... posted one point on the year, an<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>t in the season opener against<br />

UAB (8/31) ... made first collegiate start against Binghamton<br />

(9/22) and then got a starting nod against Cornell (11/7) ...<br />

IN HIGH SCHOOL: Played varsity soccer at Brentwood<br />

High School Sonderling Center where he scored 22 career<br />

goals and 25 career<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>ts ... was a<br />

member of three<br />

league and Suffolk<br />

County and two<br />

Long Island title<br />

teams ... advanced<br />

to state semi-finals<br />

as a junior and<br />

were state final<strong>is</strong>ts<br />

h<strong>is</strong> senior season ...<br />

was a two-year<br />

starter, a two-time<br />

all-conference, allcounty,<br />

and allstate<br />

honoree ...<br />

was a two-time high<br />

school All-American<br />

selection and a<br />

two-time league<br />

MVP ... was selected<br />

as the 2006<br />

Gatorade New<br />

York State Player<br />

of the Year ...<br />

appeared on the<br />

cover of R<strong>is</strong>e<br />

magazine and<br />

l<strong>is</strong>ted as a Top<br />

25 recruit as a<br />

Amaya’s Career Stats<br />

ilber Bonilla<br />

Sophomore<br />

Midfield<br />

Brentwood, NY<br />

Brentwood HS<br />

McIntyre on Bonilla: “Willy <strong>is</strong> a naturally<br />

talented player who will continue to work hard<br />

to make the physical adjustments to excel at<br />

th<strong>is</strong> level. He possesses the technical tools to<br />

open up defenses and create scoring opportunities.”<br />

all 18 games, making<br />

17 starts ... posted<br />

one goal and four<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>ts for six points<br />

on the year ... recorded<br />

first collegiate<br />

point in the season<br />

opener with an<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>t against UAB (8/<br />

31) ... d<strong>is</strong>hed off<br />

back-to-back ass<strong>is</strong>ts<br />

off corner kicks versus<br />

Seton Hall (9/9)<br />

... posted final helper<br />

of the season off a<br />

corner in the closing<br />

minute to send the<br />

Syracuse (10/17)<br />

game into overtime ...<br />

tallied first goal in<br />

a tie against Western<br />

Michigan (10/<br />

20) ... sent<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> into the<br />

MAC semifinals<br />

with the winning<br />

score in the<br />

Michael Cunningham<br />

Sophomore<br />

Midfield<br />

Dunedin, New Zealand<br />

John McGlashan HS<br />

Michael Cunningham<br />

30<br />

AS A FRESHMAN (2007): Was<br />

the lone player on the roster to play<br />

McIntyre on Cunningham: “Michael enjoyed<br />

a very strong first year at the `Wick. He<br />

<strong>is</strong> a composed, talented midfield player who I<br />

hope will look to further impose h<strong>is</strong> personality<br />

on the game.”<br />

shootout (4-2) against Western Michigan (11/13) ... PRIOR<br />

TO HARTWICK: Has tallied 13 U-20 caps for h<strong>is</strong> native<br />

New Zealand in international competitions, including representing<br />

h<strong>is</strong> country at the 2007 U-20 World Championships<br />

... also played for New Zealand Secondary School squad ...<br />

was a member of Dunedin Technical squads from 2004-2007<br />

and played for Otago United for the past three years ... attended<br />

John McGlashan High School ... PERSONAL: Michael<br />

<strong>is</strong> the son of Phil and Saku Cunningham ... <strong>is</strong> currently undecided<br />

upon a major.<br />

15


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Cunningham’s s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2007 18 20 1 4 6<br />

Evan Doan<br />

18<br />

Sophomore<br />

Midfield<br />

Garland, TX<br />

North Garland HS<br />

AS A FRESHMAN (2007):<br />

Played in 15 games, making eight<br />

starts ... posted lone points of the<br />

year in the season opener with a<br />

game-winning goal and h<strong>is</strong> first of h<strong>is</strong> career versus UAB (8/<br />

31) ... IN HIGH SCHOOL: Played varsity soccer at North<br />

Garland High<br />

School ... scored 20<br />

career goals and<br />

added 35 career<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>ts ... was named<br />

a first team alld<strong>is</strong>trict<br />

selection as a<br />

sophomore ... played<br />

club soccer for FC<br />

Dallas Youth<br />

(formerly Dallas<br />

Inter) for four years<br />

... was chosen all four<br />

years for the Player’s<br />

Choice Award ...<br />

played for the US<br />

Youth Region III<br />

team ... was a threetime<br />

recipient of the<br />

A c a d e m i c<br />

Excellence Award ...<br />

PERSONAL:<br />

Evan <strong>is</strong> the son of<br />

McIntyre on Doan: “Evan played predominantly<br />

as a defender last fall although we see<br />

Robert and<br />

Belinda Doan<br />

him more as an attacking threat in the future.<br />

and intends to He has very soft feet and has the technical<br />

major in ability to impact a game.”<br />

Accounting.<br />

Doan’s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2007 15 5 1 0 2<br />

playing time ... sat<br />

out and redshirted ...<br />

IN HIGH<br />

SCHOOL: Graduated<br />

from Archb<strong>is</strong>hop<br />

Ryan High<br />

School . . . played<br />

club soccer with FC<br />

Delco . . . h<strong>is</strong> club<br />

team won seven<br />

straight state titles .<br />

. . was a three-time<br />

all-Catholic league<br />

pick ... also earned<br />

all-state honors ...<br />

PERSONAL: Nick<br />

<strong>is</strong> the son of Anthony<br />

and Colleen Pratico<br />

... majoring in<br />

Business Management.<br />

Nick Pratico<br />

Nick Pratico<br />

15<br />

Redshirt Sophomore<br />

Defense<br />

Philadelphia, PA<br />

Archb<strong>is</strong>hop Ryan<br />

AS A FRESHMAN (2007): Saw<br />

action in six games, making four<br />

starts ... 2006 SEASON: Trained<br />

with the varsity, but did not see<br />

McIntyre on Pratico: “Prats <strong>is</strong> a competitive<br />

defender who I believe will develop into a<br />

future mainstay in our defense. He continues<br />

to work hard at developing h<strong>is</strong> game and has<br />

the ability to shutdown opponents.”<br />

Pratico’s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2007 6 0 0 0 0<br />

Carson Pryde<br />

Carson Pryde<br />

29<br />

Sophomore<br />

Defense<br />

Calgary, Alberta<br />

Lord Beaverbrook<br />

AS A FRESHMAN (2007): Saw<br />

action in nine games, making two<br />

starts ... tallied one goal on the year<br />

... scored first collegiate goal in the<br />

final moments off a corner to force overtime against Syracuse<br />

(10/17) ... PRIOR TO HARTWICK: Graduated from Lord<br />

Beaverbrook High School, but didn’t play soccer for h<strong>is</strong> school<br />

16


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

... was named athlete of the year in 2004 and 2005 ... was<br />

nominated for the Lawrence King Award for track & field ...<br />

played for several club teams, including the Calgary Foothills<br />

Ir<strong>is</strong>h 88’s, the<br />

Calgary Foothills U-<br />

16 squad, and FC<br />

Calgary ... was a<br />

member of the U-18<br />

Provincial title team<br />

and winner of the<br />

Golden Boot Award<br />

with Foothills Ir<strong>is</strong>h, as<br />

well as winning a<br />

second place fin<strong>is</strong>h<br />

at the Sony Cup with<br />

Foothills Ir<strong>is</strong>h ...was a<br />

member of a regional<br />

title team with FC<br />

Calgary (U-17) ...<br />

also played for the U-<br />

16 Alberta South<br />

Provincial team in<br />

2004, and the<br />

Alberta Provincial<br />

team in 2005,<br />

which won the<br />

national title ...<br />

PERSONAL:<br />

Carson <strong>is</strong> the son<br />

of Collin and<br />

Deana Pryde ...<br />

undecided upon a<br />

major.<br />

McIntyre on Pryde: “Carson <strong>is</strong> a tough<br />

defender who continues to improve h<strong>is</strong> game.<br />

He has both a fantastic attitude and work rate<br />

that allows him to excel in individual matchups.”<br />

Pryde’s Career Stats<br />

Year GP Shots G A Pts<br />

2007 9 2 1 0 2<br />

Jeremy Vuolo<br />

Jeremy V<br />

0<br />

Redshirt Sophomore<br />

Goalie<br />

Downingtown, PA<br />

Downingtown West HS<br />

AS A FRESHMAN (2007):<br />

Started 16 of 18 games and posted<br />

a 4-5-7 record ... allowed 18 goals<br />

in 1590 minutes of action (1.02<br />

goals against average) ... made 55 saves ...tallied five shutouts<br />

on the year ... posted first collegiate win by blanking James<br />

Mad<strong>is</strong>on 1-0 (9/7) ... also recorded victories over Seton hall<br />

(9/9), Northern Illino<strong>is</strong> (10/28), and Buffalo (11/3) ... turned<br />

aside a season-high seven shots in a 2-0 loss at Akron (10/6)<br />

... made six saves in a victory at Buffalo (11/3), a tie versus<br />

Lafayette (9/16) and a loss at Cornell (11/7) ... stuffed final<br />

three kicks in a shootout versus Western Michigan (11/13)<br />

to send <strong>Hartwick</strong> to the MAC semifinals ... 2006 SEASON:<br />

Redshirted the season and retained freshman status ... IN<br />

HIGH SCHOOL: Graduated from Downington West High<br />

School ... played<br />

three years of soccer<br />

... was named a regional<br />

All-American<br />

as a junior ... named<br />

Chesmont League<br />

MVP as a junior ...<br />

posted 29 shutouts in<br />

h<strong>is</strong> high school career<br />

... played with FC<br />

Delco U-19 and<br />

Spirit United Club<br />

from 2000-05 ...<br />

played with the<br />

Reading Rage of the<br />

PDL prior to h<strong>is</strong><br />

freshman year at<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> ... PER-<br />

SONAL: Jeremy <strong>is</strong><br />

the son of Charles<br />

and Diana Vuolo<br />

... majoring in<br />

Business Management.<br />

McIntyre on Vuolo: “JV establ<strong>is</strong>hed himself<br />

as our starting goalkeeper in 2007 and<br />

continues to add to h<strong>is</strong> range and presence in<br />

the net. A tireless worker, he has the drive<br />

and commitment to elevate h<strong>is</strong> game even<br />

further th<strong>is</strong> year.”<br />

Vuolo’<br />

uolo’s Career Stats<br />

Year GP GA GAA Saves SO Rec.<br />

2007 16 18 1.02 55 5 4-5-7<br />

... IN HIGH<br />

SCHOOL:<br />

Played soccer at<br />

Columbia High<br />

School where he<br />

tallied five goals<br />

and six ass<strong>is</strong>ts h<strong>is</strong><br />

im Daigle<br />

Tim Daigle<br />

24<br />

Redshirt Freshman<br />

Midfield<br />

Albany, NY<br />

Columbia HS<br />

2007 SEASON: Trained with the<br />

varsity team, but didn’t see any<br />

action ... retained freshman eligibility<br />

McIntyre on Daigle: “Timmy enjoyed a<br />

good spring and showed that he can provide<br />

pace and quality to the team. We will look for<br />

Tim to compete for a position in our midfield<br />

th<strong>is</strong> season.”<br />

senior season ... played club soccer for 2006 Super Y-League<br />

New England Div<strong>is</strong>ion Champion Blackwatch Sterling ... was<br />

named a first team Super Y-League Championship selection<br />

… was chosen as the MVP of 2006 <strong>Hartwick</strong> Nike Soccer<br />

Camp… was a member of the National Honor Society ...<br />

PERSONAL: Tim <strong>is</strong> the son of Bill and Michele Daigle and<br />

has not decided on a major.<br />

17


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

27<br />

Redshirt Freshman<br />

Defense<br />

Westerly, RI<br />

Westerly HS<br />

2007 SEASON: Trained with the<br />

team, but didn’t see any action ...<br />

retained freshman eligibility ... IN<br />

HIGH SCHOOL: Lettered in<br />

soccer at Westerly High School,<br />

where he was a two-time Team MVP in soccer … garnered<br />

first team all-Div<strong>is</strong>ion II South accolades h<strong>is</strong> junior and senior<br />

campaigns …<br />

was a 2006<br />

academic all-state<br />

honoree …<br />

lettered three<br />

years in track …<br />

participated in<br />

National Honor<br />

Jayson Sherman<br />

McIntyre on Sherman: “Jayson demonstrated<br />

th<strong>is</strong> past Spring that he can compete<br />

for our left back position. A very fit, cons<strong>is</strong>tent,<br />

and committed player, he has been a good<br />

addition to our program.”<br />

Society and was a 2006 Wendy’s He<strong>is</strong>sman Award winner<br />

…played for U16 Midstate United FC, a team which<br />

participated in the 2005 Virginia State Cup finals, and the<br />

2005 USCS National Cup Finals … team won the 2005 MAPS<br />

Showcase … also played for Bayside United, Blackwatch RI,<br />

and RI ODP … PERSONAL: Jayson <strong>is</strong> the son of Ronald<br />

and Laura Sherman … <strong>is</strong> undecided upon a major.<br />

Greg Conner<br />

Greg Conner<br />

16<br />

Freshman<br />

Defense<br />

All<strong>is</strong>on Park, PA<br />

Hampton HS<br />

IN HIGH SCHOOL: Lettered<br />

four years in soccer and basketball<br />

at Hampton High School ... was the<br />

Team MVP, an all-section, a WPI-<br />

AL honoree and a first team all-star in soccer h<strong>is</strong> senior<br />

campaign ... helped lead h<strong>is</strong> squad to a spot in the WPIAL<br />

semifinals and a berth in the state tournament in 2007 ...<br />

played in the<br />

2007 WPIAL All-<br />

Star Classic ...<br />

team captured<br />

the section title<br />

in 2006 ... was a<br />

four-year Honor<br />

McIntyre on Conner: “Greg <strong>is</strong> a young<br />

player who we are delighted has joined us at<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>. He <strong>is</strong> an athletic player with good<br />

size and the dedication to be successful at<br />

th<strong>is</strong> level.”<br />

Student at Hampton ... played for one state championship<br />

club team - Pennsylvania Premier Alliance (2003) ... was a<br />

member of the 2004 Pittsburgh Strikers team that won the<br />

Region I PA Western State Cup ... also played for Penns<br />

Forest in 2005 ... PERSONAL: Greg <strong>is</strong> the son of Jon and<br />

Kim Conner ... father lettered four years at Lock Haven University<br />

where he was a member of the 1977 national title<br />

team and Team MVP ... mother played four years of tenn<strong>is</strong> at<br />

Seton Hill <strong>College</strong>, where she was inducted into the hall-offame<br />

after posting a 102-1 record ...plans to major in Business<br />

Admin<strong>is</strong>tration.<br />

Brian Gordon<br />

Brian Gordon<br />

7<br />

Junior<br />

Defense<br />

Renfrew, Scotland<br />

Trinity HS/U Albany<br />

2007 SEASON: Played in 14<br />

games at the University of Albany,<br />

making 14 starts ... reg<strong>is</strong>tered 11<br />

shots on goal ... was named to the<br />

all-tournament teams at the VCU Nike Tournament as well<br />

as at the Adidas Classic at Colgate ... 2006 SEASON: Started<br />

all 18 games as a freshman ... tallied two goals ... netted first<br />

collegiate goal in<br />

a victory over<br />

Siena (9/20) and<br />

scored a gamewinning<br />

tally in a<br />

2-1 victory over<br />

Maine (10/11) ...<br />

named to the<br />

America East all-rookie team and all-tournament team ...IN<br />

HIGH SCHOOL: Was a five-year player for Trinity High<br />

School, where he was a teammate of current Hawk John Paul<br />

Boyle ... earned first team all-region honors in 2005 ... played<br />

five years with St. Mirren FC and helped the team to the<br />

Scott<strong>is</strong>h Cup Finals ... plays for Neilston Juniors FC ... was<br />

named to the America East Honor Roll ... PERSONAL: Brian<br />

<strong>is</strong> the son of Brian and Catherine Gordon ... majoring in<br />

European H<strong>is</strong>tory.<br />

Owen Botting<br />

Owen Botting<br />

3<br />

Sophomore<br />

Defender<br />

Billingshurst, England<br />

The Weald School<br />

2007 Season: Played in 19 games<br />

making 18 starts for Heidelberg<br />

<strong>College</strong> in Tiffin, Ohio ... received<br />

third team Great Lakes Region<br />

honors ... named to the Ohio Athletic Conference second<br />

team ... reg<strong>is</strong>tered two goals and three ass<strong>is</strong>ts for the Student<br />

Princes over the course of the season ... notched the gamewinning<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>t in<br />

Heidelberg’s<br />

season-opening<br />

win over the<br />

McIntyre on Gordon: “Brian <strong>is</strong> a very good<br />

addition to our program providing important<br />

experience to our defense. He possesses an<br />

aggression, confidence, and passion that will<br />

allow him to quickly fit in with our squad.”<br />

McIntyre on Botting: “Owen <strong>is</strong> a solid<br />

defender who provides our team with good<br />

balance. He <strong>is</strong> a composed, experienced<br />

player with good technical range and the<br />

ability to deliver quality service into our forwards.”<br />

<strong>College</strong> of<br />

Wooster.<br />

PERSONAL:<br />

Owen <strong>is</strong> the son<br />

of Les and Kate<br />

Botting ... plans to major in Business Admin<strong>is</strong>tration.<br />

18


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Nick Roydhouse<br />

Nick Roydhouse<br />

6<br />

Freshman<br />

Midfield<br />

Palmerston North, New Zealand<br />

Palmerston North Boys HS<br />

Dan Summers<br />

Dan Summers<br />

9<br />

Freshman<br />

Forward<br />

Banstead, England<br />

Sutton Grammar School<br />

PRIOR TO HARTWICK: Brings<br />

extensive international experience<br />

to the lineup ... played for New<br />

Zealand U13, U14 and U15 squads and represented h<strong>is</strong> country<br />

at the 2007<br />

FIFA U20 World<br />

Cup in Canada ...<br />

traveled with New<br />

Zealand Secondary<br />

Schools to<br />

Europe in 2006 ...<br />

played in 14 different<br />

country<br />

and 15 international<br />

events ... garnered Palmerston North Boys’ High School<br />

Dux Ludorum honors in 2006 ... PERSONAL: Nick <strong>is</strong> the<br />

son of Grant and Rita Roydhouse ... plans to major in Business<br />

Admin<strong>is</strong>tration at <strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

Patrick Thompson<br />

Patrick Thompson<br />

17<br />

Freshman<br />

Midfield<br />

Candor, NY<br />

Candor HS<br />

IN HIGH SCHOOL: Two-sport<br />

letterman at Candor High School ...<br />

lettered one year in track and four<br />

years in soccer for the Indians ...<br />

was a first team all-state honoree and a two-time IAC MVP ...<br />

posted a school<br />

record 34 goals<br />

and d<strong>is</strong>hed off 32<br />

ass<strong>is</strong>ts h<strong>is</strong> senior<br />

year ... holds a<br />

part of the<br />

school’s 4x800<br />

relay record ...<br />

McIntyre on Roydhouse: “Nick will provide<br />

balance to our midfield and add additional<br />

quality to our team in the final third of<br />

the field. H<strong>is</strong> experience last summer at the<br />

U20 World Cup will be invaluable to him as<br />

he quickly makes the transition to life in the<br />

MAC.”<br />

McIntyre on Thompson: “Pat <strong>is</strong> a skillful,<br />

driven midfield player with the mobility to get<br />

around the field. I believe that he will be able<br />

to successfully make the transition to games<br />

here on Elmore Field.”<br />

served as a two-year team captain for soccer ... was part of a<br />

team that advanced to the finals of the BC Fusion Premier<br />

Club State Cup ... participated in National Honor Society ...<br />

played six years for the New York State ODP<br />

team...PERSONAL: Patrick <strong>is</strong> the son of Bob and Valerie<br />

Thompson ... has a brother who runs cross country and track<br />

at the University of Colorado ... plans to major in Business<br />

Admin<strong>is</strong>tration at <strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

PRIOR TO HARTWICK: Has<br />

played seven years soccer and five<br />

years cricket ... played two years for<br />

Walton and Hersham FC Youth team and was the team’s top<br />

goal scorer in<br />

2005-06 season<br />

with 22 markers<br />

in 17 games ...<br />

played 2007-08<br />

season for<br />

Kingstonian FC<br />

and netted six<br />

goals in 18 starts<br />

McIntyre on Summers: “Dan <strong>is</strong> a strong,<br />

physical forward who we believe will make life<br />

uncomfortable for opposing defenses. He has<br />

the ability to hold up the ball and also the<br />

attacking instinct and skill to contribute important<br />

goals.”<br />

... served as Sutton School’s d<strong>is</strong>trict captain (under 14 through<br />

till under 18 age groups) and was team captain for Surrey<br />

County (under 16s til under 18s) ... was a national trial<strong>is</strong>t for<br />

the England Schoolboys team ... PERSONAL: Dan <strong>is</strong> the<br />

son of Michael and Janette Summers ... <strong>is</strong> undecided upon a<br />

major.<br />

Sam Wright<br />

Sam W<br />

11<br />

Junior<br />

Midfield<br />

Cornwall, England<br />

Bryant & Stratton<br />

PRIOR TO HARTWICK: Played<br />

two years at Bryant & Stratton<br />

<strong>College</strong> ... was a two-year all-region<br />

honoree ... attended Carterton<br />

Community School back in England, where he lettered in<br />

rugby and soccer<br />

... PERSONAL:<br />

Sam <strong>is</strong> the son of<br />

Ian and Linda<br />

Wright ...<br />

planning to major<br />

in Business<br />

Admin<strong>is</strong>tration.<br />

McIntyre on Wright: “Sam <strong>is</strong> an experienced<br />

player who will screen our defense and<br />

act as a link to our front line. He <strong>is</strong> an excellent<br />

passer of the ball who has a great feel for<br />

the game.”<br />

19


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Seasoned veteran John Paul Boyle ’09 led<br />

the Hawks in scoring with 7 goals and 15<br />

points en route to garnering all-league and<br />

all-region accolades.<br />

The <strong>Hartwick</strong> men’s soccer program<br />

has had one storied h<strong>is</strong>tory since its<br />

inception back in 1956 It’s made 23<br />

NCAA appearances; captured a<br />

national title in 1977; has had 26 All-<br />

Americans over the years, and watched<br />

two of its players be recognized as the<br />

Hermann Trophy Award recipients.<br />

However, the program hadn’t seen<br />

anything before like the 2007 season, a<br />

campaign that ended in a late 1-0 loss<br />

to Buffalo in the semifinals of the Mid-<br />

American Conference Championships.<br />

The team fin<strong>is</strong>hed with a 5-6-7 record.<br />

Yes, a school record seven ties went in<br />

the record books.<br />

“Although our 2007 record perhaps<br />

does not reflect th<strong>is</strong>, I feel it was a decent<br />

season and forward progress was<br />

certainly made,” said <strong>Hartwick</strong> Head<br />

Coach Ian McIntyre ’96. “As a body of<br />

work, we saw constant improvement<br />

throughout the season and we played<br />

some good attacking soccer.”<br />

After the first four games, the Hawks<br />

looked like a team with a m<strong>is</strong>sion-getting<br />

back to the NCAA Tournament. They<br />

opened up the season by splitting two<br />

contests at the Westfield Cup in Akron,<br />

Ohio by downing 2006 NCAA qualifier<br />

UAB (3-1) before dropping a 3-1<br />

dec<strong>is</strong>ion to nationally-ranked New<br />

Mexico. The following week, <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

recaptured the Mayor’s Cup crown by<br />

blanking James Mad<strong>is</strong>on 1-0 on a<br />

converted penalty kick by Chr<strong>is</strong> Jackson<br />

in the first half and then got revenge<br />

2007 Rev<strong>is</strong>ited<br />

with a 3-0 defeat of Seton Hall in a<br />

rematch of an opening round clash of<br />

the 2005 NCAA Tournament. Liam<br />

Parrington was named the tournament’s<br />

defensive MVP, while Jackson received<br />

the offensive MVP honors for the second<br />

consecutive year.<br />

However, the next nine games<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> failed to post a win. The Hawks<br />

went 0-3-6 during that span and fell to<br />

3-4-6 overall. In that time period,<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> fell to Penn (2-1), Binghamton<br />

(2-1) and to then 24 th -ranked Akron (2-<br />

0) and recorded ties against Lafayette<br />

(0-0), Fairfield (0-0), Bowling Green (2-<br />

2), Syracuse (1-1), Western Michigan (3-<br />

3), and Colgate (2-2). In the meeting<br />

with Fairfield, the game pitted not only<br />

a pair of <strong>Hartwick</strong> alumnus in Ian<br />

McIntyre and Stags’ head coach Carl<br />

Rees, but two members of the <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

Athletic Hall-of-Fame. On October 17,<br />

Carson Pryde picked a great time to<br />

bang in h<strong>is</strong> first collegiate goal in the<br />

closing 3:30 of regulation off a restart<br />

as <strong>Hartwick</strong> battled back to tie the<br />

Orangemen.<br />

On October 28, the Hawks returned<br />

to Elmore Field for Senior Day and put<br />

an end to the winless skid with a<br />

convincing 3-0 result over the defending<br />

MAC champions, Northern Illino<strong>is</strong>. Less<br />

than a week later, <strong>Hartwick</strong> posted its<br />

first-ever road win in its short h<strong>is</strong>tory<br />

in the league with a 2-1 victory at Buffalo<br />

as John Paul Boyle scored in the 73 rd<br />

minute. With the dec<strong>is</strong>ion, the Hawks<br />

fin<strong>is</strong>hed their first-ever MAC regularseason<br />

with a 2-1-2 record.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> completed the regular<br />

season by resting<br />

several regulars in a<br />

1-0 loss at arch-rival<br />

Cornell.<br />

The Hawks went<br />

into the league<br />

tournament with the<br />

third seed and<br />

hosted Western<br />

Michigan for the<br />

second time at<br />

Elmore in the<br />

opening round.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> advanced<br />

to the semifinals,<br />

which were played<br />

in Akron, in rather<br />

dramatic fashion.<br />

With the game<br />

knotted at 1-1 after<br />

two overtime<br />

sessions, the Hawks prevailed 4-2 in<br />

penalty kicks. <strong>Hartwick</strong> was down 1-0<br />

after the first round of kicks, however,<br />

redshirt freshman goalie Jeremy Vuolo<br />

came up big by stuffing back-to-back<br />

Bronco shots and the Hawks eventually<br />

regained the lead. Up 3-2, freshman<br />

Michael Cunningham ended the evening<br />

by converting h<strong>is</strong> opportunity for the<br />

game-winner.<br />

Buffalo avenged an earlier setback at<br />

the hands of the Hawks in the semifinals<br />

of the MAC Tournament as Dan Stevens<br />

connected on h<strong>is</strong> third tally of the year<br />

with 2:04 left to end the Hawks’ season.<br />

Boyle, who went on to receive first<br />

team all-league and second team allregion<br />

accolades, completed h<strong>is</strong> junior<br />

season with a team-best seven goals and<br />

15 points. <strong>Hartwick</strong> placed two<br />

members on the all-conference’s second<br />

team in Parrington and rookie Steven<br />

Amaya. Parrington, who posted a goal<br />

and an ass<strong>is</strong>t as a defender, also garnered<br />

first team all-region honors. Amaya<br />

shined at times during the course of the<br />

season and fin<strong>is</strong>hed with a goal and a<br />

pair of helpers for four points.<br />

Due to an injury to 2006 starting<br />

goalie Joe Gibson, redshirt freshman<br />

Jeremy Vuolo was forced to make 16<br />

consecutive starts and acclimated himself<br />

to the collegiate game rather nicely. He<br />

fin<strong>is</strong>hed with a 4-5-7 record and<br />

reg<strong>is</strong>tered five shutouts on the year.<br />

Vuolo turned aside 55 shots and had a<br />

1.02 goals against average.<br />

Redshirt freshman Jeremy Vuolo hung tough for<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> posting five shutouts in net.<br />

20


<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s<br />

Post-Season<br />

Honorees<br />

John Paul Boyle<br />

1st Team MAC<br />

2nd Team North<br />

Atlantic Region<br />

2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

2007 Stat<strong>is</strong>tics<br />

No Player GP-GS G A Pts Sh Shot% GWG<br />

14 John Paul Boyle 17-16 7 1 15 40 .175 2<br />

9 Chr<strong>is</strong> Jackson 17-16 4 1 9 28 .143 1<br />

23 Austin McCann 17-12 2 3 7 20 .100 0<br />

30 Michael Cunningham 18-17 1 4 6 20 .050 0<br />

8 Jonathan Garcia-Torres 17-15 2 1 5 9 .250 0<br />

7 Barry Pearson 17-17 1 3 5 11 .091 0<br />

5 Steven Amaya 17-14 1 2 4 17 .059 0<br />

21 Liam Parrington 17-17 1 1 3 10 .100 0<br />

22 Ashton Henry 16-15 1 1 3 3 .333 1<br />

11 Chr<strong>is</strong> Sardon 13-9 1 0 2 19 .053 0<br />

18 Evan Doan 15-8 1 0 2 5 .200 1<br />

29 Carson Pryde 9-2 1 0 2 2 .500 0<br />

1 0 Wilber Bonilla 16-2 0 1 1 3 .000 0<br />

6 Eldin Sijercic 4-0 0 0 0 3 .000 0<br />

13 Sean Buruschkin 12-1 0 0 0 2 .000 0<br />

25 Phil Cartwright 4-1 0 0 0 1 .000 0<br />

17 Kevin Ross 5-3 0 0 0 1 .000 0<br />

12 Jeff Spenard 2-0 0 0 0 1 .000 0<br />

3 Tanner Satterwhite 12-9 0 0 0 1 .000 0<br />

28 Dan Buehrens 4-1 0 0 0 0 .000 0<br />

20 Jason Henderson 2-1 0 0 0 0 .000 0<br />

19 Brian Galbraith 1-0 0 0 0 0 .000 0<br />

15 Nick Pratico 6-4 0 0 0 0 .000 0<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> 18 24 18 66 195 .123 5<br />

Opponents 18 22 19 63 .111 6<br />

Liam Parrington<br />

2nd Team MAC<br />

1st team North<br />

Atlantic Region<br />

Steven Amaya<br />

2nd Team MAC<br />

No Player GP-GS MP GA Avg. Saves Pct. W L T Sho<br />

0 Jeremy Vuolo 16-16 1590:00 18 1.02 55 .753 4 5 7 5<br />

1 Joe Gibson 2-2 180:00 4 2.00 3 .429 1 1 0 0<br />

Team 1<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> 18-18 1770:00 22 1.12 59 .728 5 6 7 5<br />

Opponents 18-18 1770:00 24 1.22 59 .711 6 5 7 5<br />

2007 Results<br />

Date Opponent W/L Score Attend <strong>Hartwick</strong> Goals<br />

8/31 ! vs. UAB W 3-1 109 Pearson (1), Doan (1), Jackson (1)<br />

9/2 ! vs. #10 New Mexico L 1-3 Boyle (1)<br />

9/7 & JAMES MADISON W 1-0 1,129 Jackson (2)<br />

9/9 & SETON HALL W 3-0 225 Boyle (2), Jackson (3), Parrington (1)<br />

9/14 % @ Penn L 1-2 Boyle (3)<br />

9/16 % vs. Lafayette T 0-0 (2 ot) 145<br />

9/22 BINGHAMTON L 1-2 1,109 Jackson (4)<br />

9/26 @ Fairfield T 0-0 (2 ot) 376<br />

10/6 * @ #24 Akron L 0-2 579<br />

10/14 * @ Bowling Green T 2-2 (2 ot) 154 Boyle (4), Garcia-Torres (1)<br />

10/17 SYRACUSE T 1-1 (2 ot) 618 Pryde (1)<br />

10/20 * WESTERN MICHIGAN T 3-3 (2 ot) 903 Boyle 2 (5,6), Cunningham (1)<br />

10/24 @ Colgate T 2-2 (2 ot) 98 Team, Garcia-Torres (2)<br />

10/28 * NORTHERN ILLINOIS W 3-0 146 Henry (1), McCann (1), Sardon (1)<br />

11/3 * @ Buffalo W 2-1 216 McCann (2), Boyle (7)<br />

11/7 @ Cornell L 0-1 131<br />

11/13 ^ WESTERN MICHIGAN T 1-1 (pk) 638 Amaya (1)<br />

11/16 ^ vs. Buffalo L 0-1<br />

Games in CAPS played at <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Elmore field<br />

! - Westfield Cup (Akron, OH)<br />

& - Mayors Cup (Oneonta, NY)<br />

% - Penn Classic (Philadelphia, PA)<br />

* - Mid American Conference games<br />

^ - Mid-American Conference Tournament (Oneonta, NY/Akron, OH)<br />

21


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

52 Years Y<br />

and Kicking<br />

Hal Greig coached <strong>Hartwick</strong> to a 2-3 mark in its first-ever<br />

competitive season in 1956.<br />

A WINNING TRADITION<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> has fielded one of the nation’s most successful<br />

college soccer programs over its 51 seasons of competition. The<br />

’Wick began playing intercollegiate soccer in 1956, and posted its<br />

first winning record in 1958. Since then, <strong>Hartwick</strong> has recorded 44<br />

winning seasons in the last 48 years.<br />

The ’Wick won the NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I National Championship in<br />

1977 and have been national contenders since the early 1960s.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> has made 23 appearances in the NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I Playoffs,<br />

including 21 tournament berths in the past 37 seasons. The Hawks’<br />

last trip to the postseason happened in 2005 as the squad won the<br />

Atlantic Soccer Conference’s automatic bid and advanced to play<br />

Seton Hall in the first-round match-up. The program qualified for 13<br />

consecutive NCAA Tournaments between 1968 and 1980. <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

has reached the Final Four on seven occasions, including three times<br />

since 1980.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> claimed undefeated regular-season records in 1967,<br />

1970, 1976, and 1977. Eight other regular seasons have ended with<br />

only one loss. Including postseason play, <strong>Hartwick</strong> has won 13 or<br />

more games 14 times, including a school-record 17 wins during the<br />

1985 season.<br />

THE PLAYERS<br />

Since 1959, <strong>Hartwick</strong> has produced 26 All-Americans, with the<br />

most recent coming in 2004 as Edwin Ruiz was bestowed with the<br />

honor. Eleven of those players were multi-year All-Americans, and<br />

one, Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong>, was a three-time honoree in 1968, 1969, and<br />

1970. The program also has produced two Hermann Trophy recipients,<br />

which <strong>is</strong> awarded to the top player in the NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I<br />

ranks. In 1976, former standout Glenn Myernick won the honor as<br />

he paced the then Warriors to a 16-1-1 overall mark and a spot in<br />

the national semifinals. The following year, Billy Gazonas was named<br />

the recipient after he led <strong>Hartwick</strong> to the national title with an<br />

undefeated 16-0-2 mark, including a 2-1 victory over San Franc<strong>is</strong>o in<br />

the title game.<br />

THE COACHES<br />

Six men have held the title of head coach since the inaugural<br />

1956 campaign. Each has left a winning record behind that has fueled<br />

the tradition of <strong>Hartwick</strong> soccer.<br />

Hal Greig, <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s first coach, guided the team to a 7-2<br />

victory over LeMoyne in the ‘Wick’s first-ever soccer game.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s initial season ended with a 2-3 record, but Greig remained<br />

three more years, culminating h<strong>is</strong> stay with an 8-1 mark in<br />

1959.<br />

Greig also owns the d<strong>is</strong>tinction of coaching the first of<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s 25 All-American players. Larry Serf<strong>is</strong> earned All-American<br />

honors following the 1959 campaign.<br />

David Haase followed Greig as head coach. He led the ’Wick<br />

for seven seasons and produced a 55-15-3 record. Haase guided<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> to its first NCAA playoff berth in 1962 and led the team to<br />

the tournament again in 1964.<br />

Two-time All-American Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> was a star on those<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> teams. Papadak<strong>is</strong> <strong>is</strong> the <strong>College</strong>’s all-time leading scorer.<br />

In 1963, Papadak<strong>is</strong> was joined by Tony Martelli and Walter Piepke<br />

on the national All-America team.<br />

Haase left <strong>Hartwick</strong> to become the Director of Youth Development<br />

for the Atlanta Chiefs of the North American Soccer League.<br />

The <strong>Hartwick</strong> success story continued with the hiring of Al<br />

Miller prior to the 1967 season. He won h<strong>is</strong> first 11 games as head<br />

coach. The team eventually split a pair of Atlantic Coast Tournament<br />

games in the postseason.<br />

During Miller’s six-year stay, <strong>Hartwick</strong> qualified for postseason<br />

play every season and reached the NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I Final Four in<br />

1970. H<strong>is</strong> teams posted an impressive 7-3 mark in NCAA playoff<br />

contests.<br />

Miller was hired as the first head coach of the NASL’s Philadelphia<br />

Atoms in 1973. He directed the expansion franch<strong>is</strong>e to the<br />

NASL Championship in h<strong>is</strong> first season. Miller went on to serve as<br />

president of the Cleveland Crunch of the Major Indoor Soccer<br />

League.<br />

Miller’s successor was Timo Liekoski, an All-American player<br />

under Miller and a 1971 graduate of <strong>Hartwick</strong>. Liekoski guided the<br />

’Wick through three successful seasons. The team made three NCAA<br />

Tournament appearances and claimed third place in 1974. Following<br />

the 1975 campaign, Liekoski became Miller’s ass<strong>is</strong>tant with the Dallas<br />

Tornado of the NASL.<br />

Liekoski eventually became one of the most successful coaches<br />

in the Major Indoor Soccer League. He led the Cleveland Force for<br />

six seasons and was the second coach in league h<strong>is</strong>tory to win over<br />

200 games. Liekoski also coached the Canton Invaders of the American<br />

Indoor Soccer Association, where he won two league championships.<br />

Liekoski later served as an ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach on the 1994 U.S.<br />

World Cup team, head coach of the U.S. Under-23 team, and was the<br />

first head coach of the Columbus Crew of Major Legue Soccer. He <strong>is</strong><br />

currently the Finland Youth National Team coach.<br />

THE LENNOX ERA<br />

Liekoski’s departure led to the arrival of Jim Lennox. In h<strong>is</strong> 27<br />

years as head coach from 1976-2002, Lennox enabled <strong>Hartwick</strong> to<br />

remain one of the top programs in collegiate soccer. H<strong>is</strong> first team<br />

went 16-1-1 and fin<strong>is</strong>hed third in the NCAA Tournament.<br />

In 1977, the ’Wick again posted an undefeated regular season.<br />

In the NCAA playoffs, <strong>Hartwick</strong> defeated St. Franc<strong>is</strong>, Cornell and<br />

Philadelphia Textile to reach the Final Four held at Berkeley, California.<br />

In the semifinals against Brown, <strong>Hartwick</strong> fell behind 1-0 after<br />

four minutes of play but tied the game on a long shot by John Young<br />

just three minutes later. The ’Wick tallied three times in a 13-<br />

minute span in the second half on the way to a 4-1 victory. All-<br />

22


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

52 Years Y<br />

and Kicking<br />

Steve Long’s goal in the 65th minute sealed the<br />

deal for <strong>Hartwick</strong> in the 1977 NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I<br />

title finale against San Franc<strong>is</strong>co.<br />

American and<br />

Hermann Trophy<br />

winner Billy<br />

Gazonas scored<br />

the game-winner<br />

in the 55th<br />

minute.<br />

T h e<br />

1977 national<br />

championship<br />

game pitted<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> against<br />

two-time defending<br />

champion San<br />

Franc<strong>is</strong>co. The<br />

match was scoreless<br />

until<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Art<br />

Napolitano<br />

headed in a free<br />

kick by Duncan<br />

MacDonald in the<br />

48th minute.<br />

Steve<br />

Long tallied on a<br />

breakaway in the<br />

65th minute to<br />

give the ’Wick a<br />

2-0 lead. San<br />

Franc<strong>is</strong>co’s only<br />

goal came with<br />

four minutes remaining.<br />

The Dons outshot the ’Wick 24-10, but <strong>Hartwick</strong> goalkeeper<br />

Aly Anderson made nine saves to preserve the win.<br />

Upon their return to the <strong>Hartwick</strong> campus, the team was congratulated<br />

by an overflow crowd at the Binder Physical Education<br />

Center.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> has advanced<br />

to the national<br />

semifinals on seven occasions.<br />

In 1970 (St.<br />

Lou<strong>is</strong>) and 1974<br />

(Howard), the ’Wick<br />

fell to the eventual national<br />

champion. Five of<br />

the six semifinal losses<br />

were by one goal.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> reached<br />

the NCAA Tournament<br />

13 times during the<br />

Lennox era, and he<br />

guided the program to<br />

the semifinal round of<br />

the playoffs five times.<br />

In addition to 1976 and<br />

1977, <strong>Hartwick</strong> reached<br />

the Final Four in 1980,<br />

1984, and 1985. During<br />

the 1984 and 1985 seasons,<br />

the ’Wick was<br />

Jim Lennox led <strong>Hartwick</strong> to a 318-163-<br />

43 record from 1976-2002, including<br />

the 1977 NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I title.<br />

defeated by a single goal for a berth in the championship game.<br />

In the Lennox era, <strong>Hartwick</strong> was 21-13 in NCAA playoff contests.<br />

Seven of the defeats were by one goal and only four losses<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> All-American Ian McIntyre ’96, a Jim Lennox d<strong>is</strong>ciple,<br />

took over contol of h<strong>is</strong> alma mater prior to the 2002 campaign.<br />

He has posted a 54-27-14 mark with the Hawks, including leading<br />

the program to an NCAA play-off berth in 2005.<br />

came in the first round.<br />

At the time of h<strong>is</strong> retirement, Lennox was ranked ninth alltime<br />

among the winningest NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I coaches with 318<br />

victories.<br />

MAC’S BACK<br />

Former <strong>Hartwick</strong> All-American Ian McIntyre ’96 replaced<br />

Lennox after the 2002 season. McIntyre, who became the program’s<br />

25th All-American in 1995, guided the ’Wick to a 15-2-1 record in<br />

h<strong>is</strong> first season at the helm. H<strong>is</strong> team followed that performance<br />

with a 13-3-3 record in 2004, and in 2005 <strong>Hartwick</strong> returned to the<br />

NCAA Tournament after posting a 13-6-1 record and winning the<br />

Atlantic Soccer Conference regular-season and tournament titles,<br />

defeating crosstown rival Oneonta State, 2-0, in the ASC Championship<br />

match. <strong>Hartwick</strong> played Seton Hall in the first-round matchup<br />

and fell to the Pirates 2-1.<br />

MEMBERSHIP TO THE MAC<br />

In 2006, <strong>Hartwick</strong>, which posted an 8-10-2 overall mark, competed<br />

in the Atlantic Soccer Conference for the last time. In May of<br />

2007, the Hawks moved to the Mid-American Conference, where<br />

it immediately became eligible to compete for the league’s automatic<br />

NCAA berth in 2007. <strong>Hartwick</strong> fin<strong>is</strong>hed with the third seed<br />

in the tournament and defeated Western Michigan on penalty kicks<br />

to advance to the MAC semifinals, where it lost a last minute 1-0<br />

dec<strong>is</strong>ion to Buffalo.<br />

LOCATION<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s soccer team <strong>is</strong> a key feature of <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />

and the City of Oneonta.<br />

The ’Wick has establ<strong>is</strong>hed a winning tradition and the team <strong>is</strong><br />

the focus of local attention during the fall. Oneonta became known<br />

as “Soccertown, U.S.A.” after a 1972 NCAA playoff match between<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> and Oneonta State was witnessed by more than 8,000<br />

fans.<br />

The National Soccer Hall of Fame <strong>is</strong> also located in Oneonta,<br />

largely spurred by the success of <strong>Hartwick</strong> soccer. James “Bernie”<br />

Ross, who captained <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s inaugural men’s soccer team in<br />

1956, served as the first chairman of the board of the Hall of Fame,<br />

which was founded in 1982.<br />

23


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> in the NCAA Tournament<br />

Most NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I NCAA Tournament Wins<br />

Rank School Yrs W L T Pct.<br />

1 Indiana 32 72 25 2 .728<br />

2 St. Lou<strong>is</strong> 44 65 33 4 .637<br />

3 UCLA 34 58 31 0 .586<br />

4 Clemson 26 47 24 1 .653<br />

Virginia 29 47 24 4 .627<br />

6 HARTWICK 23 36 23 1 .608<br />

San Franc<strong>is</strong>co 28 36 24 1 .590<br />

8 Maryland 25 35 22 4 .574<br />

9 Connecticut 27 31 24 2 .544<br />

10 Brown 22 29 23 0 .558<br />

1962 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: @ Springfield L 1-2<br />

1964 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: @ Bridgeport L 0-1<br />

1968 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: @ NYU W 2-1<br />

2nd Round: @ Trinity W 4-0<br />

3rd Round: @ Maryland L 1-2<br />

1969 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Rensselaer W 5-3<br />

2nd Round: NYU W 4-3<br />

3rd Round: @ Harvard L 1-2<br />

1970 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Army W 4-0<br />

2nd Round: Columbia W 6-1<br />

3rd Round: Harvard W 4-3<br />

Semifinal: @ St. Lou<strong>is</strong> L 0-1<br />

1971 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Army W 3-0<br />

2nd Round: Cornell W 4-1<br />

3rd Round: @ Harvard L 1-4<br />

1973 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Long Island W 3-2<br />

2nd Round: Oneonta State W 2-0<br />

Quarterfinal: @ Brown L 0-1<br />

1974 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Oneonta State W 1-0<br />

2nd Round: Cornell (4 OT) *T 2-2<br />

3rd Round: Connecticut W 2-0<br />

Semifinal: vs. Howard L 1-2<br />

Consolation: vs. UCLA W 3-1<br />

* <strong>Hartwick</strong> was declared the winner by virtue<br />

of a 6-3 advantage in overtime corner kicks.<br />

1975 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Army W 2-1<br />

2nd Round: @ Cornell L 1-2<br />

1976 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Cornell W 1-0<br />

2nd Round: St. Franc<strong>is</strong> (NY) W 3-0<br />

3rd Round: Connecticut W 2-1<br />

Semifinal: @ Indiana L 1-2<br />

Consolation: vs. Clemson W 4-3<br />

1977 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: St. Franc<strong>is</strong> (NY) W 5-1<br />

2nd Round: Cornell W 3-1<br />

3rd Round: @ Philadelphia W 2-0<br />

Semifinal: vs. Brown W 4-1<br />

Championship: vs. San Franc<strong>is</strong>co W 2-1<br />

1978 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: @ Columbia L 2-3<br />

1979 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Bye<br />

2nd Round: @ Columbia L 2-3<br />

1980 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: @ Cornell (OT) W 3-2<br />

2nd Round: @ Columbia W 2-1<br />

3rd Round: Connecticut (OT) W 1-0<br />

Semifinal: vs. Indiana L 0-5<br />

Consolation: vs. Alabama A&M L 0-2<br />

1983 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Bye<br />

2nd Round: @ Columbia L 1-2<br />

1984 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Syracuse W 3-1<br />

2nd Round: @ Columbia W 1-0<br />

3rd Round: @ Fairleigh Dickinson W 1-0<br />

Semifinal: @ Indiana L 1-2<br />

1985 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Bye<br />

2nd Round: Columbia W 2-0<br />

3rd Round: Boston University W 1-0<br />

Semifinal: @ American L 0-1<br />

1986 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Bye<br />

2nd Round: Long Island W 3-2<br />

3rd Round: @ Harvard L 0-2<br />

1987 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Bye<br />

2nd Round: @ Adelphi (OT) L 0-1<br />

1989 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Yale L 0-1<br />

1993 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: Rutgers # W 2-0<br />

2nd Round: Boston University (OT) W 2-1 3rd<br />

Round: @ Princeton L 0-3<br />

# - at Wright National Soccer Campus<br />

1995 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: St. John’s W 3-2<br />

2nd Round: @ Virginia L 0-4<br />

2005 NCAA Tournament<br />

1st Round: @ Seton Hall L 1-2<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Versus Opposition<br />

in NCAAs<br />

Opponent Games W L<br />

Adelphi 1 0 1<br />

Alabama A&M 1 0 1<br />

American 1 0 1<br />

Army 3 3 0<br />

Boston University 2 2 0<br />

Bridgeport 1 0 1<br />

Brown 2 1 1<br />

Clemson 1 1 0<br />

Columbia 7 4 3<br />

Connecticut 3 3 0<br />

Cornell 6 5 1<br />

Fairleigh Dickinson 1 1 0<br />

Harvard 4 1 3<br />

Howard 1 0 1<br />

Indiana 3 0 3<br />

Long Island 2 2 0<br />

Maryland 1 0 1<br />

NYU 2 2 0<br />

Oneonta State 2 2 0<br />

Philadelphia 1 1 0<br />

Princeton 1 0 1<br />

Rensselaer 1 1 0<br />

Rutgers 1 1 0<br />

San Franc<strong>is</strong>co 1 1 0<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> 2 2 0<br />

St. John’s 1 1 0<br />

St. Lou<strong>is</strong> 1 0 1<br />

Seton Hall 1 0 1<br />

Syracuse 1 1 0<br />

Springfield 1 0 1<br />

Trinity 1 1 0<br />

UCLA 1 1 0<br />

Virginia 1 0 1<br />

Overall 5 9 3 6 2 3<br />

24<br />

24


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

1977 National Champions<br />

Billy Gazonas holds the NCAA trophy high following<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s 2-1 victory over San Franc<strong>is</strong>co back in<br />

1977 national title game.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> claimed the 1977 NCAA Championship<br />

with a near perfect 16-0-2 record,<br />

defeating the University of San Franc<strong>is</strong>co in<br />

the national championship game in Berkeley,<br />

California.<br />

The Warriors were sparked by the outstanding<br />

play of freshman goalkeeper Aly<br />

Anderson and the leadership of 1977 Hermann<br />

Trophy winner and team captain Billy<br />

Gazonas.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> took a 1-0 lead two and a half<br />

minutes into the second period.<br />

The Warriors’ Duncan MacDonald<br />

sent a free kick to the near post,<br />

where Art Napolitano headed it in.<br />

“I just hit the ball on my follow<br />

through and then we cracked<br />

heads,” Napolitano was quoted in<br />

the Oneonta Daily Star. “I didn’t even<br />

see it go in the net.”<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> caught a break four minutes<br />

later when San Franc<strong>is</strong>co’s Tony<br />

Igwe’s shot hit the far post with a<br />

shot from the right side that Anderson<br />

smothered on the rebound.<br />

The Dons threatened to tie the<br />

game with a flurry of shots in the<br />

ensuing 15 minutes, but the Warriors<br />

were able to all but ice the<br />

game when Steve Long took a pass<br />

from Jeff Tipping and beat USF’s Peter<br />

Artaunoff in a one-on-one situation to<br />

give the Warriors a 2-0 lead.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> lost its shutout bid in the 87th<br />

minute when the Dons finally capitalized, with<br />

Tony Gray heading home a corner kick from<br />

Igwe.<br />

Anderson fin<strong>is</strong>hed with nine saves as the<br />

Dons outshot the Warriors by a 24-10 margin.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s John Young was named the<br />

Final Four’s Offensive Most Valuable Player<br />

after scoring a goal and adding an ass<strong>is</strong>t in the<br />

Warriors’ 4-1 semifinal win over Brown.<br />

Tipping was named the tournament’s Defensive<br />

MVP.<br />

“It’s like the whole season was practice<br />

for today,” Tipping was quoted in the Daily<br />

Star. ”What are you going to do when you’re<br />

up 2-1 with three minutes left - panic or keep<br />

your composure. We have a good skipper<br />

(pointing to Gazonas) and he keeps us under<br />

control.”<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s John Young was named the<br />

Offensive MVP of the 1977 Final Four.<br />

’Wick Hermann Trophy Winners<br />

The Robert R. Hermann Trophy, first<br />

awarded in 1967, <strong>is</strong> presented annually to<br />

the <strong>College</strong> Soccer Player of the Year.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> players Glenn “Mooch” Myernick<br />

(1976) and Billy “The Greek” Gazonas (1977)<br />

were awarded the Hermann Trophy for their<br />

efforts.<br />

The Hermann Trophy <strong>is</strong> on d<strong>is</strong>play at the<br />

National Soccer Hall of Fame in Oneonta.<br />

Glenn Myernick, 1976<br />

Myernick was team captain in 1976 and<br />

helped <strong>Hartwick</strong> reach the national semifinals<br />

with an undefeated record. Gazonas was<br />

the captain of <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s NCAA championship<br />

team in 1977 that posted a 16-0-2 overall<br />

record. Both players were All-Americans<br />

for <strong>Hartwick</strong> and both have been enshrined<br />

into <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s Athletic Hall of<br />

Fame.<br />

Myernick (#2) and Gazonas (#4) are the<br />

only two <strong>Hartwick</strong> players to have their numbers<br />

retired.<br />

Billy Gazonas, 1977<br />

25


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

School Records/All-Time L<strong>is</strong>ts<br />

Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong><br />

Mike Lopoyda<br />

Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong><br />

George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos<br />

CAREER POINTS<br />

No. Name<br />

Points<br />

1. Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1963-66) 170<br />

2. Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1967-70) 148<br />

3. Paul Cushion (1983-86) 116<br />

4. George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos (1991-94) 115<br />

5. Mark Mettrick (1984-87) 109<br />

Paul Conway (1988-91) 109<br />

7. Mike Lopoyda (1980-83) 102<br />

8. Orest Grechka (1995-98) 92<br />

9. Walter Piepke (1961-64) 84<br />

10. Steve Long (1975-78) 80<br />

CAREER GOALS<br />

No. Name<br />

Goals<br />

1. Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1963-66) 76<br />

2. Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1967-70) 62<br />

3. Paul Cushion (1983-86) 50<br />

4. Mark Mettrick (1984-87) 46<br />

Paul Conway (1988-91) 46<br />

6. Walter Piepke (1961-64) 42<br />

7. George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos (1991-94) 41<br />

8. Orest Grechka (1995-98) 40<br />

9. Mike Lopoyda (1980-83) 33<br />

10. David Long (1979-82) 32<br />

CAREER ASSISTS<br />

No. Name<br />

Ass<strong>is</strong>ts<br />

1. Mike Lopoyda (1980-83) 36<br />

2. George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos (1991-94) 33<br />

3. Pat Cruickshank (1982-85) 27<br />

4. Liam Heffernan (1993-94, 96-97) 25<br />

5. Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1967-70) 24<br />

6. Craig Potter (2003-06) 22<br />

7. Eddie Austin (1970-71) 20<br />

Steve Long (1975-78) 20<br />

Heath Danford (1987-89,`91) 20<br />

Brian Chandler (1992-95) 20<br />

SEASON POINTS<br />

No. Name<br />

Points<br />

1. Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1970) 56<br />

2. Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1963) 53<br />

3. Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1964) 48<br />

4. Mark Mettrick (1984) 41<br />

5. Paul Cushion (1983) 40<br />

6. Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1966) 39<br />

7. George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos (1994) 38<br />

David Long (1982) 38<br />

9. George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos (1993) 37<br />

Paul Conway (1988) 37<br />

SEASON GOALS<br />

No. Name<br />

Goals<br />

1. Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1963) 26<br />

2. Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1964) 24<br />

Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1970) 24<br />

4. Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1966) 19<br />

5. Mark Mettrick (1984) 17<br />

Paul Cushion (1984) 17<br />

Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1967) 17<br />

Walter Piepke (1962) 17<br />

9. Paul Conway (1988) 16<br />

David Long (1982) 16<br />

Jack McCormack (1959) 16<br />

SEASON ASSISTS<br />

No. Name<br />

Ass<strong>is</strong>ts<br />

1. George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos (1994) 14<br />

2. Pat Cruickshank (1984) 13<br />

George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos (1993) 13<br />

4. Steve Long (1976) 12<br />

Mike Lopoyda (1983) 12<br />

6. Mike Lopoyda (1981) 11<br />

Joe Mihaljavic (1982) 11<br />

8. Tony Elia (1969) 10<br />

Mike Lopoyda (1982) 10<br />

10. Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong> (1969) 9<br />

Eddie Austin (1970) 9<br />

Pat Cruickshank (1983) 9<br />

Jim DeCillo (1995) 9<br />

Liam Heffernan (1996) 9<br />

Jonathan Westmaas (2000) 9<br />

Edwin Ruiz (2004) 9<br />

Craig Potter (2006) 9<br />

Player Records<br />

Most Goals/Game<br />

7, Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong>, 1964<br />

Lowest Goals Against Average/Season<br />

0.27, Frank van der Sommen (1970)<br />

Most Shutouts/Season<br />

11, Mike Harr<strong>is</strong>on (1985)<br />

Most Consecutive Shutouts<br />

8, Frank van der Sommen (1970)<br />

Most Shutouts/Career<br />

28, Mike Harr<strong>is</strong>on (1983-86)<br />

Team Records<br />

Most Goals/Game<br />

14, vs. Susquehanna (1963)<br />

Most Goals/Season<br />

65, 1982 (19 games)<br />

Most Games/Season<br />

22; 1993 (16-4-2); 1984 (16-5-1);<br />

1980 (14-7-1)<br />

Most Wins/Season<br />

17, 1985 (17-3-1)<br />

Best Win-Loss Percentage<br />

.944, 1977 (16-0-2)<br />

Most Consecutive Wins<br />

14, 1963-64 and 1970<br />

Most Games Without a Loss<br />

20, 1966-67<br />

Fewest Goals Allowed/Season<br />

8, 1964 (11 games), 1970 (15 games)<br />

Most Shutouts/Season<br />

11, 1985<br />

Most Consecutive Shutouts<br />

8, 1970<br />

26


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

All-Americans<br />

Player<br />

Years<br />

Larry Serf<strong>is</strong> 1959<br />

Walter Piepke 1962, 64<br />

Larry<br />

Serf<strong>is</strong><br />

Walter<br />

Piepke<br />

Tony Martelli 1963<br />

Nick Papadak<strong>is</strong> 1963, 66<br />

Alec Papadak<strong>is</strong> 1968, 69, 70<br />

John<br />

Young<br />

Aly<br />

Anderson<br />

Timo Liekoski 1969<br />

Tony Elia 1969, 70<br />

Tony<br />

Martelli<br />

Nick<br />

Papadak<strong>is</strong><br />

Colm Keenan 1971<br />

Eddie Austin 1971<br />

Dave D’Errico 1972, 73<br />

David<br />

Long<br />

Mike<br />

Lopoyda<br />

Doug Wark 1973<br />

Glenn Myernick 1974, 76<br />

Alec<br />

Papadak<strong>is</strong><br />

Timo<br />

Liekoski<br />

Keith Von Eron 1976<br />

Billy Gazonas 1977<br />

John Young 1979<br />

Greg<br />

Brown<br />

Mark<br />

Mettrick<br />

Aly Anderson 1980<br />

David Long 1981, 82<br />

Mike Lopoyda 1983<br />

Tony<br />

Elia<br />

Colm<br />

Keenan<br />

Greg Brown 1984, 85<br />

Mark Mettrick 1985, 87<br />

Mike Harr<strong>is</strong>on 1986<br />

Mike<br />

Harr<strong>is</strong>on<br />

Paul<br />

Conway<br />

Paul Conway 1989<br />

Mike Burns 1990, 91<br />

George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos 1993, 94<br />

Eddie<br />

Austin<br />

Dave<br />

D’Errico<br />

Ian McIntyre 1995<br />

Edwin Ruiz 2004<br />

Mike<br />

Burns<br />

George<br />

Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos<br />

Doug<br />

Wark<br />

Glenn<br />

Myernick<br />

Keith<br />

Von Eron<br />

Bill<br />

Gazonas<br />

Ian<br />

McIntyre<br />

Edwin<br />

Ruiz<br />

27


AAA<br />

Aascheim, Roy 1962-1963<br />

Adams, Steve 1996<br />

Ajamu, Toure 1995-1996<br />

Albanese, Tim 2002<br />

Albert, John 1986-1989<br />

Albury, Gavin 1993, 1995-1996<br />

Altenhofen, Karl 1956<br />

Alvarez, Steve 1992<br />

Amaya, Steven 2007-SA<br />

Anderson, Aly 1977-1980<br />

Anderson, Donald 1956-1959<br />

Angelotti, Mike 1971-1974<br />

Antonio, Joe 1993-1995<br />

Appel, Larry 1956<br />

Armbrecht, Brian 1995<br />

Arredondo, Jason 1999<br />

Atkinson, Shawn 1990-1991<br />

Austin, Eddie 1970-1973<br />

Avetrani, Percy 2000-2003<br />

BBB<br />

Baehm, Ray 1956-1957<br />

Baker, Simon 1989-1992<br />

Baldacci, Steve 1980-1981<br />

Bardzilowski, Joe 1985<br />

Beattie, Gary 1960<br />

Behuke, Jeffrey 1965-1967<br />

Bennett, Geoff 1992-1994<br />

Benenson, Jon 1998<br />

Bet<strong>is</strong>on, Bill 1970-1971<br />

Bielert, Troy 2003<br />

Blackwell, Jamie 1996<br />

Bluem, John 1972-1974<br />

Blundell, Mike 1977, 1978<br />

Boin, Paul 1986-1989<br />

Bonilla, Wilber 2007-SA<br />

Booth, Alan Scott 1961<br />

Bos, Henry 1965<br />

Bosevski, Peco 1977-1979<br />

Boughton, Nat 1981-1983<br />

Boyle, Bill 1994-1997<br />

Boyle, John Paul 2005-SA<br />

Brandt, Justin 2001-2004<br />

Brayton, Scott 1977-1979<br />

Brolan, Kevin 2005<br />

Bronson, John 1967-1969<br />

Brown, Greg 1982-1985<br />

Brunstetter, Dan 1995<br />

Buehrens, Dan 2005-SA<br />

Burns, Colin 1999-2002<br />

Burns, Kevin 1995-1998<br />

Burns, Mike 1988-1991<br />

Buruschkin, Sean 2005-SA<br />

CCC<br />

Canfield, Richard 1967<br />

Cardillo, NIck 2003-06<br />

Carlow, Ross 1998<br />

Carman, Scott 2003<br />

Carmany, Brian 2001-02<br />

Cartwright, Phil 2005-SA<br />

Casazza, William 1961<br />

Cassella, Shawn 1991-94<br />

Castine, Richard 1961-64<br />

Castledine, Allen 1967-68<br />

Castledine, Ken 1966-68<br />

Catana, Rob 2000-03<br />

2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Player Reg<strong>is</strong>ter<br />

Chaffee, Robert 1965-66<br />

Chambers, C. Alan 1961<br />

Chandler, Brian 1992-95<br />

Charbonneau, Howard 1973-76<br />

Charlton, Damien 2001-02<br />

Chernobay, Viktor 1996-99<br />

Chiarenza, Meo 1991<br />

Chibli, Aaron 2005-06<br />

Chillemi, Frank 1968-70<br />

Chudowsky, Andy 1983-84<br />

Clark, Richard 1969<br />

Clark, Rick 1967-70<br />

Clarke, Jason 1997-2000<br />

Cleaveland, Robert 1966-68<br />

Cohen, Harold 1956<br />

Collins, Eric 1995<br />

Columbia, John 1958-59<br />

Concha, Ricardo 1967-68<br />

Conklin, Curt<strong>is</strong> 1967<br />

Connaughton, Terry 1984-87<br />

Conway, Paul 1988-91<br />

Cook, Toby 1976-78 (mgr.)<br />

Cooper, Michael 2002-03<br />

Corbeil, Paul 1962-65<br />

Corona, Juan Carlos 1998-2001<br />

Coutant, Malcolm 1964<br />

Cowan, Bruce 1968-71<br />

Crifasi, Rob 1969 (mgr.)<br />

Cruickshank, Pat 1982-85<br />

Cru<strong>is</strong>e, Ryan 2004-06<br />

Cuddy, Robert 1977-79<br />

Cunningham, Michael 2007-SA<br />

Cushion, Paul 1983-86<br />

DDD<br />

DaBramo, Jimmy 1978-79<br />

Daley, Ed 1962<br />

Danford, Heath 1987-91<br />

D’Angelo, Dan 1979-82<br />

D’Avanzano, Michele 1992<br />

Davy, Robert 1958-59<br />

DeCillo, Jim 1992-95<br />

Deming, MIke 1996-97, 1999-2000<br />

D’Errico, Dave 1972-73<br />

Doan, Evan 2007-SA<br />

Dobert, Ken 1958-59<br />

Doneit, Pete 1994-97<br />

Downing, Barry 1956-59<br />

Doyle, Brian 1973<br />

Drake, Wayne 1969 (mgr.)<br />

Dreier, Denn<strong>is</strong> 1956<br />

Duckwall, Larry 1957-59<br />

Dulanto, Felipe 1968-71<br />

EEE<br />

Ebin, Tony 1969<br />

Eckhart, Walter 1969<br />

Edmonds, Baird 1960<br />

Edmonds, Trav<strong>is</strong> 1956<br />

Egan, Ed 1966, 1968<br />

Eggan, Laef 1996-97<br />

Elia, Tony 1969, 1970<br />

Engerth, Eddie 1972-73<br />

Engkv<strong>is</strong>t, Ken 1957<br />

Engl<strong>is</strong>h, Richard 1963<br />

Eppleman, Carl 1956<br />

Erskine, Kipp 2005-06<br />

Escobar, Randy 1974-77<br />

Evans, Gerry 1957<br />

Everall, James, 2006<br />

Ezick, Wayne 1958-59<br />

FFF<br />

Feary, Ron 1966, 1968<br />

Feltham, Jon 1968<br />

F<strong>is</strong>her, Kenneth 1963-64<br />

F<strong>is</strong>her, Terry 1967-70<br />

Flanigan, Ray 1970-72<br />

Flannery, Phil 2003-04<br />

Forchelli, Rick 1968 (mgr.)<br />

Fornera, Joe 1970 (mgr.)<br />

Fouser, Kevin 1980-81<br />

Fraser, Iain 1982-85<br />

Freeman, Steve 1992<br />

GGG<br />

Gaffney, Chr<strong>is</strong> 1984<br />

Galbraith, Brian 2007-SA<br />

Garcia, Carmelo (Pie) 1995<br />

Garcia-Torres, Jonathan 2006-SA<br />

Gazonas, William 1974-77<br />

Geczy, Chr<strong>is</strong> 1989-92<br />

Gibbons, Karl 1999-2001<br />

Gibson, Joe 2005-SA<br />

Gibson, John 1969-71<br />

Girvin, Charles 1965 (mgr.)<br />

Gold, Warren 1956-57<br />

Goles, Chr<strong>is</strong> 1985, 1988<br />

Gonzales, Lou<strong>is</strong> 1980-83<br />

Gordon, Omar 2003-04<br />

Graver, Jack 1959<br />

Greatwich, Chr<strong>is</strong> 2005-06<br />

Grechka, Orest 1995-98<br />

Gregson, David 1987-90<br />

Gregson, Andrew 1990-92<br />

Grippo, Tom 1978-79<br />

Gurgacz, Roman 1970-71<br />

HHH<br />

Haber, Elias 1964-67<br />

Hamill, Gerald 1960-61<br />

Hardy, Ronald 1974-76<br />

Harmon, Pete 1956<br />

Harr<strong>is</strong>on, Jim 1971-74<br />

Harr<strong>is</strong>on, Mike 1983-86<br />

Hartlein, Steve 1981-82<br />

Hartzog, Raphael 1974<br />

Hawkins, Eddie 1980-83<br />

Healy, John 1960, 1963<br />

Heffernan, Liam 1993-94, 1996-97<br />

Hemming, Tyler 2003-06<br />

Henderson, Jason 2004-07<br />

Hendrickson, Jomo 1999<br />

Henry, Ashton, 2006-07<br />

Herrera, Josh 2001-03<br />

Herron, Bob 1959<br />

Hill, Edward 1970<br />

Hoffard, Todd 1990-92, 1994<br />

Hotchk<strong>is</strong>s, Steve 1986<br />

Howe, John 1960<br />

Hurley, Matt 1996<br />

III<br />

Ingl<strong>is</strong>, James 1958-61 (mgr.)<br />

Ir<strong>is</strong>h, David 1986-88<br />

Isaacson, Bob 1971-72, 1974<br />

Ivanchukov, Khyen 1974-77<br />

JJJ<br />

Jackson, Chr<strong>is</strong> 2004-07<br />

Jackson, Todd 1987-90<br />

Jameson, Steve 1972-75<br />

Juve, Richard 1960<br />

KKK<br />

Kadupski, Charles 1976-77<br />

Kahres, William 1961<br />

Kaplan, Arnold 1958-59<br />

Karpy, Todd 1985-88<br />

Katen, Roger 1967<br />

Keegan, Dick 1956<br />

Keenan, Brendan 1969-72<br />

Keenan, Colm 1970-73<br />

Kelly, Douglas 1963<br />

Kelley, Jim 1984-85<br />

Kelley, Kenneth, Jr. 2004-06<br />

Kennedy, David 1983<br />

Kent, Tom 1979-80<br />

Keppen, Jason 1990<br />

Kern, Matt 1984-87<br />

Kessler, Matt 1998-99<br />

Kevill, Tim 1972-1975<br />

Kilgour, Glen 1958-1959<br />

Kinnear, Dominic 1985<br />

Klengesmeier, Jim 1972<br />

Kmosko, Matt 1990-92, 1994<br />

Knight, Rick 1968 (mgr.)<br />

Knott, Colin 1994<br />

Korondi, Kevin 1992-93<br />

Koss, Michael 1961<br />

Krasnicki, Derrek 2003<br />

Kreikamp, Todd 1993<br />

Kuenstler, Grant 1961-62<br />

Kuk, Brian 1993-95<br />

LLL<br />

Lagasse, Gerard 1994-96<br />

Lagrow, Wendy 1991-93 (mgr.)<br />

Lang, Charles 1974-75 (mgr.)<br />

Lanham, Mitch 1997-2000<br />

Laning, Ray 1961<br />

Lausin, Kevin 1982-83<br />

Laut, Chr<strong>is</strong> 1984-86<br />

Lawrence, Matt 1992-95<br />

Lawton, Erik 1993<br />

Lelli, Davide 2005-06<br />

Leonard, Doug 1998<br />

Lew<strong>is</strong>, David 1961<br />

Lew<strong>is</strong>, D.G. 1993-94, 1997<br />

Liekoski, Timo 1968-70<br />

Lill<strong>is</strong>, John 1963<br />

Lockwood, Judd 1956-59<br />

Long, David 1979-82<br />

Long, Stephen 1975-78<br />

Lopez, Jose 1962-63<br />

Lopoyda, Mike 1980-83<br />

28<br />

28


Los, Peter 1988-91<br />

Lucero, Rhys 1996<br />

Lyman, Jeffrey 1965-67<br />

Lynch, Pat 1983-86<br />

MMM<br />

MacDonald, Duncan 1974-77<br />

Maczko, John 1961<br />

Mader, John 1961, 1966-67<br />

Mag<strong>is</strong>trale, David 1983-86<br />

Maier, Peter 1963-66<br />

Manne, John 1964<br />

Marcos, Franc<strong>is</strong>co 1965-67<br />

Maresca, Thomas 1975-78<br />

Markley, Chr<strong>is</strong> 1978-79<br />

Marsh, Dan 1970 (mgr.)<br />

Marsh, Tom 1998-2001<br />

Marshall, Jeff 1972-74<br />

Martelli, Anthony 1962-64<br />

Martelli, Brian 1993<br />

Martelli, Larry 1966-69<br />

Mayeu, Alton 1959-62<br />

McCabe, Campbell 1956-57<br />

McCann, Austin 2005, 2007-SA<br />

McCarthy, Will 1986-89<br />

McCormack, John 1957-60<br />

McCormack, Tim 1993<br />

McCracken, Bruce 1984 (mgr.)<br />

McFall, Bill 1956<br />

McHugh, Neil 2004<br />

McInerney, Gerard 1983-84<br />

McIntyre, Ian 1992-95<br />

McLauchlan, James 1965-68<br />

McLean, Neil 1999-2002<br />

McMannus, Kevin 1978<br />

McRury, Stuart 1993-94<br />

Melin, Jeff 1987-1988<br />

Mello, Anthony 1956<br />

Mendoza, Pedro 2004<br />

Merle, Scott 1985<br />

Merlin, Jeffrey 1961<br />

Mesa, Charles 1969<br />

Mesalles, Victor 1960-63<br />

Mettrick, Mark 1984-87<br />

Meyer, Bruce 1986<br />

Mihalijevic, Joe 1981-82<br />

Miles, Nick 1995-98<br />

Millar, Scott 2002<br />

Miller, Joel 1967-68 (mgr.)<br />

Miller, Ralph 1963<br />

Mitchell, Matt 1986-87<br />

Mitchinson, Adam 2004-06<br />

Mjaatvedt, Robert 1956<br />

Moate, Randall 1999-2002<br />

Mohawk, John 1964 (mgr.)<br />

Mollar, Glen 1956-57<br />

Moore, Chr<strong>is</strong> 1985<br />

Moore, David 1977-80<br />

Moore, Tom 1971<br />

Morland, Mert 1956<br />

Moroney, Jim 1990<br />

Morr<strong>is</strong>, Jeff 1988<br />

Morr<strong>is</strong>sey, Joe 1986-87<br />

Murdock, Mervin 1956<br />

Murphy, Steve 1998<br />

Murray, Tom 1978-81<br />

Muse, Clifford 1966<br />

2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Player Reg<strong>is</strong>ter<br />

Myernick, Glenn 1974-76<br />

NNN<br />

Napolitano, Art 1974-1977<br />

Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos, George 1991-94<br />

Nesbitt, Art 1962<br />

Nicolarsen, Andrew 1996-98<br />

Nolt, Frank 1978-80<br />

OOO<br />

Olney, Sandy 1991-92<br />

Ombadykow, Zeren 1974-77<br />

Orlando, Joe 1968<br />

Ortgies, Fred 1956-57<br />

Ostrowski, Peter 1961-63<br />

PPP<br />

Pace, Bradley 1986-89 (mgr.)<br />

Papa, Robert 1956-59<br />

Papadak<strong>is</strong>, Alec 1967-70<br />

Papadak<strong>is</strong>, Nick 1963-66<br />

Parrington, Liam 2007-SA<br />

Parsells, Adam 2000-02<br />

Partridge, Brad 1973<br />

Paulides, Robert 1981<br />

Pearson, Barry 2004-07<br />

Pedro, Carlos 1972<br />

Pe<strong>is</strong>er, Ray 1958-59<br />

Pena, Rudy 1977-80<br />

Perzigian, Andrew 1995-98<br />

Peters, Larry 1962-65<br />

Petro, Dave 1971-73<br />

Piagentini, Mike 1999-2002<br />

Piepke, Walter 1961-1964<br />

Porreca, Chr<strong>is</strong> 1990-91, 1993-94<br />

Porter, Mark 1995-96, 1998<br />

Potter, Craig 2003-06<br />

Potter, Jack 2000<br />

Pozar, Denny 1959-60, 1962<br />

Pratico, Nick 2007-SA<br />

Pryde, Carson 2007-SA<br />

Purcell, John 1968<br />

RRR<br />

Railton, Taylor 1957<br />

Ramsay, Robert 1989<br />

Rees, Carl 1984-87<br />

Regrutto, Ryan 2002-03<br />

Reno, Matt 1990-94<br />

Ressmeyer, John 1958-61<br />

Reyes, Pablo 1984<br />

Reynoso, Esteban 1975-76<br />

Ribbe, Andrew 1957-59<br />

Riehl, Scott 1984<br />

Rinaldo, Leonard 1966-68<br />

Roberts, Aaron, 2006<br />

Roberts, Ken 1959-62<br />

Roberts, Rique 1959-62<br />

Roberts, Ronnie 1980-83<br />

Robinson, Aaron 1999-2002<br />

Rodrigues, Edwardo 1964-67<br />

Rodriguez, Kenny 2003-06<br />

Rogers, Jason 2002<br />

Roig, Frank 1979-82<br />

Rogers, Jason 2002<br />

Rollo, Jim 1971-72<br />

Rosario, Al 1956<br />

Rose, Owen 1980-81<br />

Rosenberry, Richard 1967<br />

Ross, James 1956-57<br />

Ross, Kevin 2007<br />

Ruiz, Edwin 2003-04<br />

Russell, Thomas 1967<br />

Russo, Filippo 1969-72<br />

Russo, Santo 1988-90<br />

Ryan, Joseph 1975-1978<br />

Ryan, Patrick 2002-03<br />

SSS<br />

Sadighi, Ramm 1982<br />

Samba, Alieu Badou 1963-64, 66-67<br />

Sambrook, Andrew 1997-2000<br />

Sandy, John 1957-60<br />

Sanon, Ymeric 2002<br />

Sansone, Mark 1979-80<br />

Santo, Tony 1970-73 (mgr.)<br />

Sardon, Chr<strong>is</strong> 2004-07<br />

Satterwhite, Tanner, 2006-07<br />

Saunders, Kevin 2000-02<br />

Scales, Bryan 1988-90<br />

Schimpf, Chuck 1978<br />

Schneider, Rudolph 1958-59<br />

Schneider, Scott 1960<br />

Scribner, Daniel 1961-62<br />

Scott, John 1996<br />

Sellow, Marcy 1962<br />

Secora, John 1959<br />

Seddon-Johnston, Wyatt 2005-06<br />

Senn, Ryan 1996-98<br />

Serafy, Grant 1983-84<br />

Serf<strong>is</strong>, Larry 1958-59<br />

Shaw, Floyd 1958-59<br />

Sheldon, William 1960-62<br />

Shure, Harr<strong>is</strong> 1958-59<br />

Sijercic, Eldin 2003-05, 2007<br />

Silvas, Gabriel 2005<br />

Slobodyan, Peter 1998-99<br />

Smith, Charles 1969<br />

Smith, Gil 1956-58<br />

Smith, John 1964<br />

Smith, Mike 1991<br />

Smith, Scott 1981-84<br />

Snell, Mark 1976-79<br />

Snow, Chr<strong>is</strong> 1981-82<br />

Sobolewski, Andy 1978-79<br />

Sosnowich, Mike 1960-63<br />

Spake, Dan 1995<br />

Spenard, Jeff 2007-SA<br />

Spencer, Nate 1993<br />

Stalker, Earl 1958-59<br />

Stepanow, Angrik 1975-76<br />

Stewart, Dave 1967-68<br />

Stone, Corey 2002<br />

Storer, John 1962, 1964-65<br />

Strauss, Dan 1962-64<br />

Strode, Matt 1998-2001<br />

Swan, Brian 1965-66<br />

TTT<br />

Takamoto, Larry 1963<br />

Talarico, Matt 1997<br />

Taylor, Ronald 1957-59<br />

Taylor, Tim 2000, 2002-03<br />

Teleky, Attila 1999-2000<br />

Temperley, Simon 1987-90<br />

Ticconi, Roger 1960-61<br />

Tipping, Jeff 1974-77<br />

Tordone, Steve 1988-91<br />

Tracey, Ryan 1998-2000<br />

UUU<br />

Underwood, James 1965-1966<br />

VVV<br />

Vachek, John 1993<br />

van der Sommen, Frank 1969-70<br />

Van Eron, Keith 1973-76<br />

Vandenburgh, Colin 1996-97, 2000<br />

Vandenburgh, Doug 1972-73<br />

Vanderwall, Scott 1991-93<br />

Vatter, Rob 1984-86<br />

Vernon, John 1967-68<br />

Verni, Matt 1996<br />

Vial, Roberto 1962-65<br />

Vickers, Ryan 1997<br />

Victor, Greg 2000-03<br />

Vigars, Lee 1997<br />

Vogel, Gary 1975-77<br />

Vuolo, Jeremy 2007-SA<br />

WWW<br />

Wachter, Mark 1978-81<br />

Wagenaar, Josh 2003-05<br />

Wakhale, Raj 1987-90<br />

Wall<strong>is</strong>, Philip 1975-78<br />

Ward, Dave 1971-73<br />

Wark, Doug 1972-73<br />

Watson, Evan 1999-2000<br />

Weber, Mike 1971<br />

Webster, Bruce 1963<br />

We<strong>is</strong>field, Charles 1962-65<br />

Welch, Matt 1986<br />

Welch, Matt 1986<br />

Wenger, Nate 1995<br />

Westmaas, Jonathan 1999-2002<br />

Wheeler, Bruce 1957<br />

White, Tim 2001-02<br />

Wilkinson, Tom 1975<br />

Willett, Donald 1967<br />

Williams, Arthur 1969<br />

Wills, James 1989-92<br />

Wingert, Norman 1969-71<br />

Witkowski, John 1998-2000<br />

Worthen, Bucky 1974<br />

YYY<br />

Yamag<strong>is</strong>hi, Jovan 2003<br />

Young, John 1977-79<br />

ZZZ<br />

Zeh, Denn<strong>is</strong> 1956-57<br />

Ze<strong>is</strong>et, Matt 1998-2000<br />

Zinsky, Kenny 1992-96<br />

Zodikoff, Mort 1956<br />

Zwiebel, Robert 1962-65<br />

29<br />

29


1956 (2-3-0)<br />

Coach: Hal Greig<br />

LeMoyne W 7-2<br />

@ King’s <strong>College</strong> L 3-6<br />

Oswego State L 1-10<br />

King’s <strong>College</strong> W 4-3<br />

@ Ithaca L 1-9<br />

1957 (2-4-0)<br />

Coach: Hal Greig<br />

@ LeMoyne W 1-0<br />

@ Oswego State L 1-4<br />

@ King’s <strong>College</strong> W 3-1<br />

@ Hobart L 2-4<br />

Cortland J.V. W 5-3<br />

King’s <strong>College</strong> L 2-3<br />

Ithaca L 0-4<br />

1958 (5-4-0)<br />

Coach: Hal Greig<br />

@ Clarkson L 0-3<br />

@ Ithaca L 2-5<br />

@ Oswego State L 2-3<br />

Hobart W 4-0<br />

King’s <strong>College</strong> W 3-1<br />

@ King’s <strong>College</strong> W 3-1<br />

Roberts Wesleyan W 5-0<br />

@ LeMoyne W 1-0<br />

Union L 1-4<br />

1959 (8-1-0)<br />

Coach: Hal Greig<br />

@ Roberts Wesleyan W 2-0<br />

Ithaca W 3-2<br />

Hamilton L 1-4<br />

Clarkson W 3-2<br />

LeMoyne W 6-0<br />

Oswego State W 4-3<br />

@ Hobart W 4-1<br />

@ King’s <strong>College</strong> W 4-0<br />

@ Union W 1-0<br />

2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

1956-1959<br />

Overall Record:<br />

17-12<br />

NCAA Berths: 0<br />

Hal Greig<br />

1961-1966<br />

Overall Record:<br />

55-15-3<br />

NCAA Berths: 1<br />

1964<br />

David Haase<br />

Year<br />

ear-By-Y<br />

-By-Year<br />

1961 (8-1-1)<br />

Coach: David Haase<br />

@ Colgate L 1-6<br />

Ithaca T 2-2<br />

Drew W 3-0<br />

@ Roberts Wesleyan W 5-2<br />

@ Hobart W 2-0<br />

Hamilton W 2-1<br />

@ Union W 2-0<br />

Clarkson W 3-0<br />

@ Rensselaer W 3-1<br />

@ Harpur W 4-0<br />

1962 (10-2-0)<br />

Coach: David Haase<br />

@ Susquehanna W 7-0<br />

@ New York University L 3-4<br />

@ Clarkson W 6-1<br />

@ Ithaca W 3-0<br />

Hobart W 8-0<br />

@ Hamilton W 1-0<br />

@ Long Island W 2-1<br />

Union W 2-0<br />

RIT W 2-1<br />

Rensselaer W 6-2<br />

Cortland State W 3-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

@ Springfield L 1-2<br />

1963 (10-1-0)<br />

Coach: David Haase<br />

Colgate W 6-0<br />

Susquehanna W 14-1<br />

New York University W 5-2<br />

Ithaca W 3-1<br />

@ Union W 8-0<br />

Long Island L 1-2<br />

Clarkson W 7-0<br />

Hamilton W 4-0<br />

@ Rensselaer W 4-2<br />

@ RIT W 2-1<br />

@ Notre Dame W 4-2<br />

1964 (9-2-0)<br />

Coach: David Haase<br />

@ Den<strong>is</strong>on W 6-0<br />

@ Ohio University W 7-1<br />

@ New York University W 1-0<br />

Union W 9-0<br />

RIT W 12-1<br />

@ Long Island W 2-0<br />

Seton Hall W 5-0<br />

@ Ithaca W 2-1<br />

@ Clarkson L 0-2<br />

Rensselaer W 8-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

@ Bridgeport L 1-2<br />

1965 (4-4-1)<br />

Coach: David Haase<br />

Colgate W 3-2<br />

Springfield L 2-4<br />

Long Island L 0-5<br />

Clarkson W 4-2<br />

Ithaca T 2-2<br />

@ Seton Hall W 7-2<br />

@ Army L 0-2<br />

@ RIT W 5-0<br />

New York University L 2-3<br />

1966 (10-1-1)<br />

Coach: David Haase<br />

Fairleigh Dickinson W 6-2<br />

@ Clarkson W 7-1<br />

@ Colgate L 1-2<br />

@ Susquehanna W 5-0<br />

@ Army W 3-2<br />

@ Ithaca W 6-1<br />

RIT W 2-1<br />

Howard W 6-1<br />

@ New York University W 5-1<br />

Newark <strong>College</strong> W 1-0<br />

Atlantic Coast Tournament<br />

vs Lynchburg W 7-0<br />

vs Elizabethtown T 1-1<br />

1967-1972<br />

Record: 64-12-3<br />

NCAA Berths: 5<br />

’68, ’69, ’70,<br />

’71, ’72<br />

Al Miller<br />

1967 (11-1-0)<br />

Coach: Al Miller<br />

@ Fairleigh Dickinson W 5-3<br />

Colgate W 4-3<br />

Susquehanna W 6-0<br />

@ RIT W 5-0<br />

Ithaca W 2-1<br />

Army W 4-1<br />

Clarkson W 9-3<br />

New York University W 2-1<br />

@ Howard W 2-0<br />

@ Newark <strong>College</strong> W 3-0<br />

Atlantic Coast Tournament<br />

vs Worcester Tech W 3-0<br />

vs Elizabethtown L 1-2<br />

1968 (9-3-0)<br />

Coach: Al Miller<br />

Fairleigh Dickinson W 4-1<br />

Cornell W 4-0<br />

Newark <strong>College</strong> W 5-3<br />

@ Clarkson W 3-0<br />

RIT W 8-0<br />

@ Ithaca W 1-0<br />

@ Colgate L 2-4<br />

Bridgeport W 3-1<br />

@ Army L 2-4<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

@ New York University W 2-1<br />

@ Trinity W 4-0<br />

@ Maryland L 1-2<br />

1969 (10-2-1)<br />

Coach: Al Miller<br />

Fairleigh Dickinson W 6-0<br />

@ Cornell W 4-0<br />

@ Newark <strong>College</strong> W 5-0<br />

Clarkson W 8-1<br />

RIT W 3-0<br />

Colgate W 1-0<br />

@ Bridgeport T 1-1<br />

Ithaca W 2-0<br />

New York University L 0-1<br />

Adelphi W 6-3<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Rensselaer W 5-3<br />

New York University W 4-3<br />

@ Harvard L 0-1<br />

1970 (14-1-0)<br />

Coach: Al Miller<br />

@ Fairleigh Dickinson W 5-0<br />

Cornell W 2-0<br />

Long Island W 1-0<br />

Brockport State W 3-0<br />

@ RIT W 2-0<br />

@ Clarkson W 10-0<br />

@ Colgate W 6-0<br />

Bridgeport W 5-0<br />

@ Ithaca W 2-1<br />

New York University W 3-0<br />

@ Adelphi W 4-2<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Army W 4-0<br />

Columbia W 6-1<br />

Harvard W 4-3<br />

@ St. Lou<strong>is</strong> L 0-1<br />

1971 (11-2-1)<br />

Coach: Al Miller<br />

@ Fairleigh Dickinson W 2-0<br />

@ Cornell L 0-1<br />

Long Island W 2-1<br />

@ Brockport State W 5-1<br />

RIT W 5-0<br />

Colgate W 1-0<br />

@ Bridgeport W 1-0<br />

Ithaca W 4-0<br />

@ New York University W 2-1<br />

Adelphi T 1-1<br />

@ Harpur W 3-0<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Army W 3-0<br />

Cornell W 4-1<br />

@ Harvard L 1-4<br />

1972 (9-3-1)<br />

Coach: Al Miller<br />

Cornell W 4-2<br />

Lehigh W 5-2<br />

@ RIT W 10-1<br />

Brockport State W 2-1<br />

Bridgeport W 2-1<br />

@ Ithaca W 9-2<br />

New York University W 3-1<br />

@ Colgate W 5-0<br />

@ East Stroudsburg T 0-0<br />

@ Adelphi L 1-2<br />

Harpur L 1-2<br />

30


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Brockport State W 2-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Oneonta State L 0-3<br />

1973-1975<br />

Overall Record:<br />

30-9-7<br />

NCAA Berths: 3<br />

1973, 1974, 1975<br />

Timo Liekoski<br />

1973 (9-2-3)<br />

Coach: Timo Liekoski<br />

Montclair State W 2-1<br />

@ Cornell T 0-0<br />

@ Lehigh W 1-0<br />

@ Brockport State W 2-1<br />

Colgate W 2-0<br />

@ Bridgeport T 0-0<br />

Ithaca W 4-0<br />

Akron W 3-0<br />

Adelphi W 2-1<br />

East Stroudsburg L 2-3<br />

@ Binghamton T 0-0<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Long Island W 3-2<br />

Oneonta State W 2-0<br />

@ Brown L 0-1<br />

1974 (10-4-3)<br />

Coach: Timo Liekoski<br />

@ Montclair State W 1-0<br />

@ Penn State L 1-5<br />

Connecticut L 0-3<br />

Brockport State T 0-0<br />

Cornell T 0-0<br />

@ Colgate W 2-1<br />

Bridgeport W 3-2<br />

@ Ithaca W 5-0<br />

@ East Stroudsburg L 1-2<br />

@ Adelphi T 1-1<br />

Lehigh W 5-0<br />

Binghamton W 2-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Oneonta State W 1-0<br />

Cornell** W 2-2<br />

Connecticut W 2-0<br />

vs. Howard L 1-2<br />

vs. UCLA W 3-1<br />

** <strong>Hartwick</strong> declared winner by<br />

virtue of a 6-3 advantage in corner<br />

kicks.<br />

1975 (11-3-1)<br />

Coach: Timo Liekoski<br />

Buffalo W 7-1<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 1-0<br />

@ Brockport State W 2-0<br />

Colgate W 3-0<br />

@ Connecticut T 1-1<br />

@ Trenton State W 2-0<br />

@ Ithaca W 2-0<br />

East Stroudsburg W 2-1<br />

Adelphi L 0-2<br />

@ Lehigh W 2-1<br />

@ Cornell L 0-3<br />

@ Binghamton W 4-1<br />

Penn State W 2-0<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Army W 2-1<br />

@ Cornell L 1-2<br />

1976-2002<br />

Overall Record:<br />

318-164-43<br />

NCAA Berths: 12<br />

1976, ’77, ’78, ’79,<br />

’80, ’83, ’84, ’85, ’86,<br />

’87, ’89, ’93, ’95<br />

Jim Lennox<br />

1976 (16-1-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

Binghamton W 3-0<br />

@ Penn State W 2-1<br />

Brockport State W 5-0<br />

@ Colgate W 3-0<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile W 3-2<br />

@ Buffalo W 6-1<br />

Bridgeport W 2-0<br />

@ Ithaca W 2-0<br />

@ East Stroudsburg W 5-1<br />

@ Adelphi T 0-0<br />

Lehigh W 8-1<br />

Cornell W 2-1<br />

Connecticut W 1-0<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Cornell W 1-0<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 3-0<br />

Connecticut W 2-0<br />

@ Indiana L 1-2<br />

vs Clemson W 4-3<br />

1977 (16-0-2)<br />

National Champions<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

@ Binghamton W 3-0<br />

Ithaca W 3-0<br />

Penn State W 1-0<br />

@ Brockport State T 0-0<br />

Colgate W 2-1<br />

Philadelphia Textile W 1-0<br />

@ Albany W 3-0<br />

@ Bridgeport W 1-0<br />

East Stroudsburg W 2-0<br />

Adelphi T 1-1<br />

Syracuse W 5-2<br />

@ Cornell W 2-0<br />

@ Connecticut W 2-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 5-1<br />

Cornell W 3-1<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile W 2-0<br />

vs Brown W 4-1<br />

vs San Franc<strong>is</strong>co W 2-1<br />

1978 (10-5-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

vs. Southern Illino<strong>is</strong> L 0-5<br />

@ Indiana L 0-4<br />

@ Penn State W 4-3<br />

Albany W 2-1<br />

Brockport State W 5-1<br />

Baltimore W 3-2<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile L 0-5<br />

Binghamton W 1-0<br />

Bridgeport W 5-1<br />

@ Colgate W 2-1<br />

@ East Stroudsburg W 3-1<br />

@ Adelphi L 1-2<br />

@ Syracuse W 2-0<br />

Cornell W 1-0<br />

Vermont T 1-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

@ Columbia L 2-3<br />

1979 (12-3-2)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

UCLA W 2-1<br />

Philadelphia Textile W 1-0<br />

@ Bridgeport W 4-2<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> L 0-3<br />

@ Columbia W 3-1<br />

@ Baltimore W 5-0<br />

Albany W 1-0<br />

@ Cornell W 3-0<br />

@ Binghamton T 0-0<br />

@ St. Lou<strong>is</strong> L 1-2<br />

@ Brockport W 4-0<br />

East Stroudsburg W 2-0<br />

Adelphi W 1-0<br />

Syracuse W 5-0<br />

@ Colgate W 2-0<br />

@ Vermont T 1-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Columbia L 2-3<br />

1980 (14-7-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

Colgate W 5-0<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile L 0-2<br />

@ Princeton L 0-2<br />

@ St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 2-0<br />

Baltimore W 1-0<br />

St. Lou<strong>is</strong> L 1-3<br />

@ Albany W 4-1<br />

Bridgeport W 6-1<br />

North Adams State W 6-1<br />

Long Island W 3-1<br />

@ East Stroudsburg W 1-0<br />

@ Adelphi T 1-1<br />

@ Syracuse W 1-0<br />

Cornell W 2-1<br />

Vermont W 1-0<br />

@ South Carolina L 0-2<br />

@ Old Dominion L 1-2<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

@ Cornell W 3-2<br />

@ Columbia W 2-1<br />

Connecticut W 1-0<br />

vs Indiana L 0-5<br />

vs Alabama A&M L 0-2<br />

1981 (10-6-4)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

UNC-Charlotte W 4-1<br />

U.S. International W 3-2<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> L 1-2<br />

Baltimore W 2-0<br />

Princeton T 1-1<br />

Albany W 8-0<br />

vs Long Island L 1-4<br />

vs Adelphi W 4-1<br />

@ Harvard T 0-0<br />

@ Colgate W 5-0<br />

Old Dominion T 2-2<br />

Syracuse W 1-0<br />

East Stroudsburg W 7-0<br />

@ Cornell L 0-3<br />

Columbia T 1-1<br />

Philadelphia Textile L 3-4<br />

@ Bridgeport W 5-0<br />

@ Duke L 0-3<br />

@ N.C. State L 0-1<br />

ECAC Championship<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 1-0<br />

1982 (13-5-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

Penn State W 4-3<br />

Air Force W 3-0<br />

Oneonta State W 2-1<br />

Union W 7-0<br />

vs Clemson L 0-4<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> L 0-3<br />

Princeton T 3-3<br />

Albany W 5-0<br />

vs Long Island L 1-2<br />

@ Adelphi L 2-6<br />

Baltimore W 5-0<br />

Colgate W 10-0<br />

@ Syracuse L 0-1<br />

East Stroudsburg W 4-0<br />

Cornell W 3-0<br />

@ Columbia W 3-1<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile W 3-2<br />

Harvard W 3-0<br />

Lehigh W 7-0<br />

1983 (13-4-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

American W 2-1<br />

Oneonta State W 4-1<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 3-0<br />

@ Old Dominion W 5-1<br />

@ Princeton W 1-0<br />

Mar<strong>is</strong>t W 6-0<br />

Long Island W 2-1<br />

Adelphi L 1-3<br />

@ Colgate W 3-0<br />

@ Fordham T 1-1<br />

Syracuse W 5-1<br />

@ Penn State W 2-1<br />

@ Cornell L 1-2<br />

Columbia L 1-2<br />

Philadelphia Textile W 3-2<br />

@ Harvard W 2-1<br />

@ Massachusetts W 3-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

@ Columbia L 1-2<br />

1984 (16-5-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

@ William & Mary W 5-3<br />

Bowling Green L 0-1<br />

Rutgers W 2-0<br />

@ Mar<strong>is</strong>t W 1-0<br />

@ St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 3-0<br />

Fordham W 7-1<br />

Brooklyn W 3-1<br />

Princeton W 2-1<br />

Colgate L 1-2<br />

Harvard L 0-1<br />

@ Adelphi W 5-0<br />

@ Syracuse W 2-0<br />

Penn State W 5-2<br />

Cornell W 5-0<br />

31


@ Columbia T 1-1<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile L 2-3<br />

@ Long Island W 2-0<br />

Massachusetts W 5-2<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Syracuse W 3-1<br />

@ Columbia W 1-0<br />

@ Fairleigh Dickinson W 1-0<br />

@ Indiana L 1-2<br />

1985 (17-3-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

@ Connecticut T 0-0<br />

Southern Illino<strong>is</strong> W 3-1<br />

Alabama A&M L 0-1<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 8-0<br />

Mar<strong>is</strong>t W 9-1<br />

@ Fordham W 3-1<br />

Philadelphia Textile W 4-0<br />

@ Colgate W 1-0<br />

@ Harvard W 3-2<br />

Syracuse W 5-0<br />

William & Mary W 3-1<br />

@ Penn State W 3-0<br />

@ Cornell W 2-0<br />

Columbia W 2-1<br />

@ Hofstra W 3-1<br />

Long Island L 0-1<br />

Adelphi W 5-0<br />

@ Princeton W 1-0<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Columbia W 2-0<br />

Boston University W 1-0<br />

@ American L 0-1<br />

1986 (13-7-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

Drexel W 2-1<br />

Evansville L 1-4<br />

Oneonta State W 3-1<br />

vs N.C. State W 3-1<br />

@ Duke L 0-5<br />

@ St. Franc<strong>is</strong> (NY) T 0-0<br />

Fordham W 3-0<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile L 2-3<br />

@ Adelphi W 1-0<br />

Colgate W 4-1<br />

Harvard W 3-1<br />

@ Syracuse L 1-3<br />

@ Mar<strong>is</strong>t W 5-2<br />

Penn State L 2-3<br />

Cornell W 1-0<br />

@ Columbia W 2-1<br />

Hofstra W 4-1<br />

@ Long Island L 0-3<br />

Princeton W 3-2<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Long Island W 3-2<br />

@ Harvard L 0-2<br />

1987 (10-5-4)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

vs W<strong>is</strong>c. - Milwaukee T 3-3<br />

vs W<strong>is</strong>c. - Mad<strong>is</strong>on L 0-1<br />

Boston University L 1-2<br />

Oneonta State W 4-1<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 1-0<br />

@ Fordham L 0-1<br />

Philadelphia Textile W 2-1<br />

Adelphi L 0-2<br />

@ Colgate W 3-0<br />

@ Harvard T 1-1<br />

Syracuse T 3-3<br />

2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

@ Army W 3-0<br />

@ Penn State T 1-1<br />

@ Cornell W 1-0<br />

@ Hofstra W 3-0<br />

Long Island W 2-1<br />

Columbia W 1-0<br />

@ Princeton W 3-2<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

@ Adelphi L 0-1<br />

1988 (9-8-2)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

vs William & Mary L 1-2<br />

vs Illino<strong>is</strong> State W 2-0<br />

Akron L 3-4<br />

Oneonta State W 4-1<br />

@ St. Franc<strong>is</strong> L 1-3<br />

Fordham W 4-0<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile L 0-2<br />

@ Columbia L 1-6<br />

Colgate W 5-0<br />

Harvard W 3-1<br />

@ Syracuse W 4-0<br />

Army L 1-2<br />

Penn State T 0-0<br />

Cornell W 3-0<br />

@ Adelphi L 0-3<br />

Hofstra W 2-1<br />

@ Long Island L 0-1<br />

Brooklyn T 4-4<br />

Princeton W 4-0<br />

1989 (13-5-2)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

vs North Carolina W 4-2<br />

@ Wake Forest W 3-2<br />

Navy T 0-0<br />

Vermont L 0-1<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 3-2<br />

@ Fordham W 4-1<br />

Philadelphi Textile L 1-2<br />

Columbia W 7-0<br />

@ Colgate W 5-2<br />

Syracuse T 1-1<br />

@ Harvard W 3-2<br />

@ Army W 2-1<br />

@ Penn State W 1-0<br />

@ Cornell L 0-1<br />

Adelphi W 5-1<br />

@ Hofstra W 1-0<br />

Boston <strong>College</strong> W 1-0<br />

@ Brooklyn W 4-0<br />

@ Princeton L 2-4<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Yale L 0-1<br />

1990 (10-7-3)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

vs Cleveland State W 1-0<br />

@ Akron L 0-1<br />

Loyola (Maryland) T 1-1<br />

UNC-Charlotte L 1-2<br />

@ St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 1-0<br />

@ Rutgers L 1-5<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile T 1-1<br />

@ Columbia L 0-2<br />

Colgate W 4-0<br />

Harvard W 2-0<br />

Fordham L 1-2<br />

@ Yale W 2-0<br />

Army W 2-0<br />

Penn State W 3-2<br />

Cornell W 3-2<br />

@ Adelphi W 2-0<br />

@ Syracuse T 0-0<br />

@ Boston <strong>College</strong> L 1-3<br />

Brooklyn L 1-2<br />

Princeton W 4-2<br />

1991 (8-10-2)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

@ Portland L 0-3<br />

vs Simon Fraser W 6-2<br />

Northern Illino<strong>is</strong> W 1-0<br />

Oneonta State W 3-1<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> L 0-1<br />

Rutgers L 0-2<br />

Philadelphia Textile W 6-3<br />

@ Colgate W 3-0<br />

Boston University L 1-5<br />

@ Fordham W 4-1<br />

@ Harvard W 3-2<br />

@ Army T 0-0<br />

@ Penn State L 1-3<br />

@ Cornell W 2-1<br />

Adelphi T 3-3<br />

Syracuse L 0-1<br />

Vermont L 0-1<br />

@ Brooklyn L 0-1<br />

@ Princeton L 0-1<br />

Columbia L 3-4<br />

1992 (12-5-0)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

@ Hartford L 1-2<br />

@ St. Franc<strong>is</strong> (NY) W 3-1<br />

Fresno State W 1-0<br />

Monmouth W 2-0<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile W 1-0<br />

Colgate W 2-0<br />

@ Boston University L 0-3<br />

Fordham W 3-0<br />

Harvard W 1-0<br />

Army L 1-2<br />

Yale W 4-0<br />

Cornell W 4-0<br />

@ Adelphi L 0-2<br />

@ Syracuse L 0-1<br />

@ Vermont W 2-1<br />

@ Columbia W 2-0<br />

Princeton W 1-0<br />

1993 (16-4-2)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

vs. Cleveland State W 5-1<br />

@ Akron T 1-1<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 6-0<br />

Oneonta State W 6-0<br />

Portland W 1-0<br />

@ Princeton W 2-1<br />

Philadelphia Textile W 4-0<br />

@ Colgate W 2-0<br />

Vermont L 0-1<br />

@ Fordham W 6-0<br />

Boston University W 3-0<br />

@ Army W 3-1<br />

@ Cornell W 3-1<br />

Adelphi W 3-1<br />

Syracuse W 2-0<br />

@ Rutgers L 0-2<br />

@ Harvard L 1-4<br />

Penn State T 0-0<br />

Columbia W 6-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

Rutgers W 2-0<br />

Boston University W 1-0<br />

@ Princeton L 0-3<br />

1994 (11-5-3)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

@ St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 3-1<br />

Providence W 3-0<br />

Towson State W 8-0<br />

@ Vermont W 5-2<br />

Princeton L 0-3<br />

Colgate T 2-2<br />

@ Drexel T 1-1<br />

@ Boston University L 1-3<br />

Army W 3-0<br />

New Hampshire L 1-3<br />

Cornell W 6-0<br />

@ Adelphi W 3-0<br />

@ Syracuse L 2-3<br />

Rutgers W 3-1<br />

@ Harvard W 2-1<br />

@ Columbia W 2-0<br />

@ St. John’s T 2-2<br />

@ Philadelphia Textile W 3-1<br />

@ Brown L 1-2<br />

1995 (13-6-2)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

Drexel W 4-0<br />

St. John’s L 1-2<br />

Davidson W 2-0<br />

Georgetown T 3-3<br />

@ Princeton L 0-2<br />

@ Colgate W 2-1<br />

vs. Evansville L 3-4<br />

vs. George Mason W 2-1<br />

Vermont W 1-0<br />

Lafayette W 3-1<br />

@ Army T 2-2<br />

@ Cornell L 1-2<br />

Adelphi W 1-0<br />

Syracuse W 2-0<br />

@ Rutgers W 3-2<br />

@ Penn State L 0-5<br />

Philadelphia Textile W 2-0<br />

Brown W 2-1<br />

Harvard W 2-1<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

St. John’s W 3-2<br />

@ Virginia L 0-4<br />

1996 (8-12-0)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

vs Rider L 0-1<br />

@ St. John’s L 0-5<br />

@Vermont L 0-3<br />

Mount St. Mary’s W 1-0<br />

William and Mary W 4-1<br />

Princeton W 1-0<br />

@ Lafayette W 1-0<br />

Colgate W 3-2<br />

Penn State L 0-5<br />

vs. Boston University W 4-1<br />

@ Dartmouth W 3-2<br />

Army W 1-0<br />

@ Adelphi L 1-4<br />

@ UNC-Greensboro L 1-5<br />

vs. North Carolina L 2-6<br />

Cornell L 3-4<br />

@ Maryland L 0-3<br />

@ Syracuse L 1-3<br />

@ Brown L 0-4<br />

@ Harvard L 1-4<br />

32


1997 (9-8-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

@ Mar<strong>is</strong>t W 3-0<br />

West Virginia W ot 3-2<br />

Pittsburgh T 2-2<br />

St. John’s L 0-1<br />

@ Princeton L 1-2<br />

Vermont L 1-2<br />

@ Colgate W ot 3-2<br />

@ Drexel L 0-2<br />

Penn W 2-0<br />

Lafayette W 2-1<br />

@ Army W 1-0<br />

Columbia L ot 2-3<br />

@ Dartmouth L 1-2<br />

@ Cornell L 0-1<br />

Adelphi W 2-0<br />

@ Penn State W ot 2-1<br />

Syracuse L 2-3<br />

Harvard W 3-2<br />

1998 (8-10-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

@ St. John’s T 1-1<br />

Mar<strong>is</strong>t W 2-1<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 2-0<br />

Columbia W 3-1<br />

Oneonta State W 2-0<br />

Vermont L 1-2<br />

Fairleigh Dickinson W 1-0<br />

Drexel L 0-1<br />

@ Lafayette L 0-1<br />

Dartmouth L 1-2<br />

Army W 2-0<br />

@ Connecticut L 1-3<br />

Colgate W 4-0<br />

Boston University L 0-3<br />

Cornell L 2-3<br />

@ Adelphi L 2-3<br />

Penn State W 2-0<br />

@ Syracuse L 3-5<br />

@ Harvard L 0-1<br />

1999 (9-9-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

St. John’s L 0-3<br />

@ Fairfield W 1-0<br />

St. Bonaventure W 3-1<br />

Oneonta State L 0-1<br />

Memph<strong>is</strong> L 0-1<br />

Cincinnati L ot 1-2<br />

New Hampshire L 0-3<br />

@ Lehigh L 0-1<br />

Princeton L 0-3<br />

@ Army W 3-0<br />

@ Columbia W ot 2-1<br />

@ Colgate W ot 3-2<br />

Harvard W 4-1<br />

@ Vermont L 0-1<br />

@ St. Franc<strong>is</strong> W 4-0<br />

@ Cornell W 1-0<br />

Syracuse L ot 0-1<br />

@ Penn State T 0-0<br />

Adelphi W 5-1<br />

2000 (11-8-1)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

Faifield L 0-2<br />

@ Binghamton W 5-1<br />

Virginia Commonwealth L 0-1<br />

Iona W 5-2<br />

Connecticut L 1-3<br />

2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Mar<strong>is</strong>t W 3-0<br />

Oneonta State W 2-0<br />

Columbia L 0-1<br />

Albany T 1-1<br />

Philadelphia University W 3-0<br />

Army W 5-0<br />

@ Princeton L 0-1<br />

Colgate L 0-1<br />

Howard L 2-3<br />

@ Florida International L 0-1<br />

Cornell W 7-2<br />

@ Adelphi W ot 4-3<br />

@ Syracuse W 3-0<br />

Penn State W 3-1<br />

@ Stony Brook W 1-0<br />

2001 (12-8-0)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

vs. Vermont W 2-0<br />

@ New Hampshire W 4-0<br />

vs. Mercer W 4-0<br />

vs. West Virginia W 2-1<br />

@ Philadelphia L ot 1-2<br />

@ Army L 1-2<br />

vs. Navy L ot 0-1<br />

Stony Brook W 3-0<br />

Adelphi L 0-2<br />

Fairfield L ot 0-1<br />

Florida International L 0-1<br />

@ Dartmouth W ot 3-2<br />

@ Colgate W ot 1-0<br />

@ Penn State L 0-1<br />

Syracuse W 2-1<br />

@ Oneonta State W ot 3-2<br />

@ Columbia W ot 2-1<br />

Binghamton W 2-1<br />

@ Cornell L 0-2<br />

@ Howard W 2-1<br />

2002 (9-7-3)<br />

Coach: Jim Lennox<br />

vs Coastal Carolina T 3-3<br />

@ VCU L 0-4<br />

vs Albany W 3-0<br />

vs Hartford W 1-0<br />

@ Butler W 3-0<br />

vs Indiana L 0-1<br />

@ Howard W 2-0<br />

@ Syracuse L 1-3<br />

@ Adelphi W ot 2-1<br />

@ Virginia L 0-5<br />

@ Fairleigh Dickinson W 3-2<br />

vs Colgate T 0-0<br />

vs Princeton W 3-1<br />

vs Penn State L 0-2<br />

vs Oneonta State W 1-0<br />

vs Philadelphia W 3-1<br />

@ Florida Atlantic L 0-2<br />

@ Florida International L 1-2<br />

vs Cornell T 1-1<br />

2003-present<br />

Overall Record:<br />

54-27-14<br />

NCAA Berths: 1<br />

2005<br />

Ian McIntyre<br />

2003 (15-2-1)<br />

Coach: Ian McIntyre<br />

@ Bucknell W 1-0<br />

vs. Pittsburgh W 1-0<br />

vs. Hofstra W 1-0<br />

vs. Ohio State W 1-0<br />

@ Penn State L 1-2<br />

Manhattan W 6-1<br />

Syracuse W 2-1<br />

@ Princeton W 3-0<br />

Niagara W 1-0<br />

Florida International L 2-4<br />

Army W 1-0<br />

@ Oneonta State T 0-0<br />

@ Colgate W 2-1<br />

@ Philadelphia W ot 2-1<br />

@ Fairfield W 2-1<br />

Howard W 2-1<br />

Adelphi W 2-0<br />

@ Cornell W 3-1<br />

2004 (13-3-3)<br />

Coach: Ian McIntyre<br />

Lafayette W 1-0<br />

Bucknell T 1-1<br />

vs. Fordham W 3-0<br />

vs. Ohio State T 1-1<br />

vs. Brown L ot 1-2<br />

@ Yale W 2-0<br />

@ William & Mary T 1-1<br />

vs. Old Dominion W 1-0<br />

vs. St. John’s L 1-4<br />

@ Rutgers W ot 2-1<br />

Philadelphia Univ. W 3-1<br />

@ Syracuse W 1-0<br />

Colgate W 4-0<br />

@ Adelphi W 3-1<br />

@ New Jersey Tech W 5-0<br />

@ Howard W 5-1<br />

Cornell W 4-0<br />

Oneonta State W 2-1<br />

@ Florida InternationalL 1-3<br />

2005 (13-6-1)<br />

Coach: Ian McIntyre<br />

vs. Brown W 2-1<br />

@ Connecticut L 0-2<br />

vs. Columbia W 2-0<br />

vs. Robert Morr<strong>is</strong> W 3-1<br />

Binghamton L 0-1<br />

Temple W 5-2<br />

vs. Portland W 2-1<br />

@ Washington L 0-1<br />

Syracuse T 0-0<br />

Longwood W 3-0<br />

@ Howard W 2-0<br />

Adelphi W 2-0<br />

@ St. John's W 2-1<br />

@ Oneonta State W 3-0<br />

@ Philadelphia L ot 0-1<br />

@ Penn State L 0-3<br />

NJIT W 2-0<br />

Philadelphia W 4-0<br />

Oneonta State W 2-0<br />

NCAA Tournament<br />

@ Seton Hall L 1-2<br />

2006 (8-10-2)<br />

Coach: Ian McIntyre<br />

@ Ohio State T 0-0<br />

vs Penn State L 1-2<br />

Hartford L 2-3<br />

Fairfield W 2-0<br />

Penn L 1-2<br />

Towson W ot 3-2<br />

@Temple W ot 1-0<br />

@ Binghamton L 0-1<br />

@ Brown L 1-2<br />

Philadelphia W 3-1<br />

@ NJIT T 1-1<br />

@ Adelphi L 1-2<br />

Colgate W 2-0<br />

Howard W 6-0<br />

@ Syracuse L 2 ot 0-1<br />

Florida Atlantic W 6-0<br />

@ Maryland L 0-1<br />

@ Cornell W 1-0<br />

@ Longwood L 1-3<br />

vs Florida Atlantic L 0-1<br />

2007 (5-6-7)<br />

Coach: Ian McIntyre<br />

vs. UAB W 3-1<br />

vs. New Mexico L 1-3<br />

James Mad<strong>is</strong>on W 1-0<br />

Seton Hall W 3-0<br />

@ Penn L 0-1<br />

vs. Lafayette T 0-0<br />

Binghamton L 1-2<br />

@ Fairfield T 0-0<br />

@ Akron L 0-2<br />

@ Bowling Green T 2-2<br />

Syracuse T 1-1<br />

Western Michigan T 3-3<br />

@ Colgate T 2-2<br />

Northern Illino<strong>is</strong> W 3-0<br />

@ Buffalo W 2-1<br />

@ Cornell L 0-1<br />

Western Michigan T1-1 (4-2)<br />

vs. Buffalo L 0-1<br />

33


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

’Wick Versus the Opposition<br />

OPPONENT GAMES W L T LAST RESULT<br />

Adelphi 39 19 14 6 L, 2-1 (2006)<br />

Air Force 1 1 0 0 W, 3-0 (1982)<br />

Akron 5 1 3 1 L, 2-0 (2007)<br />

Alabama A & M 2 0 2 0 L, 1-0 (1985)<br />

Alabama-Birmingham 1 1 0 0 W, 3-1 (2007)<br />

Albany 8 7 0 1 W, 3-0 (2002)<br />

American 2 1 1 0 L, 1-0 (1985)<br />

Army 2 3 1 5 6 2 W, 1-0 (2003)<br />

Baltimore 5 5 0 0 W, 5-0 (1982)<br />

Binghamton 12 7 3 2 L, 2-1 (2007)<br />

Boston <strong>College</strong> 2 1 1 0 W, 1-0 (1989)<br />

Boston University 8 4 4 0 W, 4-1 (1996)<br />

Bowling Green 2 0 1 1 T, 2-2 (2007)<br />

Bridgeport 14 11 1 2 W, 5-0 (1981)<br />

Brockport State 11 9 0 2 W, 4-0 (1979)<br />

Brooklyn 5 2 2 1 L, 2-1 (1990)<br />

Brown 8 4 4 0 L, 2-1 (2006)<br />

Bucknell 2 1 0 1 T, 1-1 (2004)<br />

Buffalo 4 3 1 0 L, 1-0 (2007)<br />

Butler 1 1 0 0 W, 3-0 (2002)<br />

Cincinnati 1 0 1 0 L, 2-1 (1999)<br />

Clarkson 13 11 2 0 W, 10-0 (1970)<br />

Clemson 2 1 1 0 L, 4-0 (1982)<br />

Cleveland State 2 2 0 0 W, 5-1 (1993)<br />

Coastal Carolina 1 0 0 1 T, 3-3 (2002)<br />

Colgate 44 36 5 3 T, 2-2 (2007)<br />

Columbia 28 17 9 2 W, 2-0 (2005)<br />

Connecticut 11 5 4 2 L, 2-0 (2005)<br />

Cornell 45 30 12 3 L, 1-0 (2007)<br />

Cortland State 2 2 0 0 W, 3-1 (1962)<br />

Dartmouth 4 2 2 0 W, 3-2 ot (2001)<br />

Davidson 1 1 0 0 W, 2-0 (1995)<br />

Den<strong>is</strong>on 1 1 0 0 W, 6-0 (1959)<br />

Drew 2 2 0 0 W, 3-0 (1961)<br />

Drexel 5 2 2 1 L, 1-0 (1998)<br />

Duke 2 0 2 0 L, 5-0 (1986)<br />

East Stroudsburg State11 8 2 1 W, 4-0 (1982)<br />

Elizabethtown 2 0 1 1 L, 2-1 (1967)<br />

Evansville 2 0 2 0 L, 4-3 (1995)<br />

Fairfield 5 3 2 1 T, 0-0 (2007)<br />

FDU-Mad<strong>is</strong>on 9 9 0 0 W, 3-2 (2002)<br />

Florida Atlantic 3 1 2 0 L, 1-0 (2006)<br />

Florida International 5 0 5 0 L, 3-1 (2004)<br />

Fordham 12 9 2 1 W, 3-0 (2004)<br />

Fresno State 1 1 0 0 W, 1-0 (1992)<br />

Georgetown 1 0 0 1 T, 3-3 (1995)<br />

George Mason 1 1 0 0 W, 2-1 (1995)<br />

Hamilton 5 3 2 0 W, 4-0 (1963)<br />

Harpur 3 2 1 0 L, 2-1 (1972)<br />

Hartford 3 1 2 0 L, 3-2 (2006)<br />

Harvard 23 14 7 2 W, 4-1 (1999)<br />

Hobart 5 4 1 0 W, 8-0 (1962)<br />

Hofstra 6 6 0 0 W, 1-0 (2003)<br />

Howard 10 8 2 0 W, 6-0 (2006)<br />

Illino<strong>is</strong> State 1 1 0 0 W, 2-0 (1988)<br />

Indiana 5 0 5 0 L, 1-0 (2002)<br />

Iona 1 1 0 0 W, 5-2 (2000)<br />

Ithaca 22 16 4 2 W, 3-0 (1977)<br />

James Mad<strong>is</strong>on 1 1 0 0 W, 1-0 (2007)<br />

King’s 7 5 2 0 W, 4-0 (1959)<br />

Lafayette 6 4 1 1 T, 0-0 (2007)<br />

Lehigh 7 6 1 0 L, 1-0 (1999)<br />

LeMoyne 4 4 0 0 W, 6-0 (1959)<br />

Long Island 17 10 7 0 L, 1-0 (1985)<br />

Longwood 2 1 1 0 L, 3-1 (2006)<br />

Loyola (Maryland) 1 0 0 1 T, 1-1 (1990)<br />

Lynchburg 1 1 0 0 W, 7-0 (1966)<br />

Manhattan 1 1 0 0 W, 6-1 (2003)<br />

Mar<strong>is</strong>t 7 7 0 0 W, 3-0 (2000)<br />

Maryland 3 0 3 0 L, 1-0 (2006)<br />

Navy 2 0 1 1 T, 0-0 (1989)<br />

OPPONENT GAMES W L T LAST RESULT<br />

Massachusetts 2 2 0 0 W, 5-2 (1984)<br />

Memph<strong>is</strong> 1 0 1 0 L, 1-0 (1999)<br />

Mercer 1 1 0 0 W, 4-0 (2001)<br />

Monmouth 1 1 0 0 W, 2-0 (1992)<br />

Montclair State 2 2 0 0 W, 1-0 (1974)<br />

Mt. Saint Mary’s 1 1 0 0 W, 1-0 (1996)<br />

Navy 1 0 1 0 L, 1-0 (2001)<br />

New Hampshire 3 1 2 0 W, 4-0 (2001)<br />

New Jersey Tech 3 2 0 1 T, 1-1 (2006)<br />

New Mexico 1 0 1 0 L 1-3 (2007)<br />

New York University 1 2 9 3 0 W, 3-1 (1972)<br />

Newark <strong>College</strong> 4 4 0 0 W, 5-0 (1969)<br />

North Adams State 1 1 0 0 W, 6-1 (1980)<br />

UNC-Charlotte 2 1 1 0 L, 2-1 (1990)<br />

UNC-Greensboro 1 0 1 0 L, 5-1 (1996)<br />

North Carolina 2 1 1 0 L, 6-2 (1996)<br />

North Carolina State 2 1 1 0 L, 1-0 (1981)<br />

Northern Illino<strong>is</strong> 2 2 0 0 W, 3-0 (2007)<br />

Notre Dame 1 1 0 0 W, 4-2 (1963)<br />

Ohio University 1 1 0 0 W, 7-1 (1964)<br />

Ohio State 3 2 0 1 T, 0-0 (2006)<br />

Old Dominion 4 2 1 1 W, 1-0 (2004)<br />

Oneonta State 19 15 2 1 W, 2-0 (2005)<br />

Oswego State 4 1 3 0 W, 4-3 (1959)<br />

Pennsylvania 3 1 2 0 L, 1-0 (2007)<br />

Penn State 26 12 10 4 L, 2-1 (2006)<br />

Philadelphia 29 19 9 1 W, 3-1 (2006)<br />

Pittsburgh 2 2 0 0 W, 1-0 (2003)<br />

Portland 3 2 1 0 W, 2-1 (2005)<br />

Princeton 23 12 9 2 W, 3-0 (2003)<br />

Providence 1 1 0 0 W, 3-0 (1994)<br />

Rensselaer 5 5 0 0 W, 8-1 (1964)<br />

RIT 11 11 0 0 W, 10-1 (1972)<br />

Rider 1 0 1 0 L, 1-0 (1996)<br />

Robert Morr<strong>is</strong> 1 1 0 0 W, 3-1 (2005)<br />

Roberts Wesleyan 3 3 0 0 W, 5-2 (1961)<br />

Rutgers 8 5 3 0 W, 2-1 ot (2004)<br />

San Franc<strong>is</strong>co 1 1 0 0 W, 2-1 (1977)<br />

Seton Hall 4 3 1 0 W, 3-0 (2007)<br />

Simon Fraser 1 1 0 0 W, 6-2 (1991)<br />

Springfield 2 0 2 0 L, 4-2 (1965)<br />

St. Bonaventure 1 1 0 0 W, 3-1 (1999)<br />

St. Franc<strong>is</strong> (NY) 22 16 5 1 W, 2-0 (1998)<br />

St. John’s 9 2 5 2 W, 2-1 (2005)<br />

St. Lou<strong>is</strong> 3 0 3 0 L, 3-1 (1980)<br />

Stony Brook 1 1 0 0 W, 3-0 (2001)<br />

South Carolina 1 0 1 0 L, 2-0 (1980)<br />

Southern Illino<strong>is</strong> 2 1 1 0 W, 3-1 (1985)<br />

Susquehanna 4 4 0 0 W, 6-0 (1967)<br />

Syracuse 32 16 11 5 T, 1-1(2007)<br />

Temple 2 2 0 0 W, 1-0 ot (2006)<br />

Towson State 2 2 0 0 W, 3-2 ot (2006)<br />

Trenton State 1 1 0 0 W, 2-0 (1975)<br />

Trinity <strong>College</strong> 1 1 0 0 W, 4-0 (1968)<br />

UCLA 2 2 0 0 W, 2-1 (1979)<br />

Union 8 7 1 0 W, 7-0 (1982)<br />

U.S. International 1 1 0 0 W, 3-2 (1981)<br />

Vermont 14 5 7 2 W, 2-0 (2001)<br />

Virginia 2 0 2 0 L, 5-0 (2002)<br />

VCU 1 0 1 0 L, 4-0 (2002)<br />

Wake Forest 1 1 0 0 W, 3-2 (1989)<br />

Washington 1 0 1 0 L, 1-0 (2005)<br />

West Virginia 2 2 0 0 W, 2-0 (2001)<br />

Western Michigan 2 0 0 2 T, 1-1 (2007)<br />

William & Mary 5 3 1 1 T, 1-1 (2004)<br />

W<strong>is</strong>consin 1 0 1 0 L, 1-0 (1987)<br />

UW - Milwaukee 1 0 0 1 T, 3-3 (1987)<br />

Worcester Tech 1 1 0 0 W, 3-0 (1967)<br />

Yale 4 3 1 0 W, 2-0 (2004)<br />

34<br />

34


Dominic Kinnear<br />

2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

In the News<br />

The 2007 season marked the<br />

51 st campaign of the <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

Men’s Soccer program. It was<br />

an exciting year here at the<br />

‘Wick but also a year during<br />

which many of our “extended<br />

soccer family” were recognized<br />

for their accompl<strong>is</strong>hments.<br />

September – The 51 st season<br />

was <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s inaugural season<br />

in the Mid-American<br />

Conference. A semi-final<br />

appearance marked a solid<br />

opening campaign with many<br />

highlights along the way.<br />

October – Former ’Wick star Dominic Kinnear, coached the<br />

Houston Dynamo to its second consecutive MLS Cup triumph<br />

over the New England Revolution (another team with <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

ties with Mike Burns ’92)<br />

March – Both Tyler Hemming ’07 and Josh Wagenaar ’07<br />

represented the U20 Canadian Team during qualification for<br />

the 2008 Olympic games. Although 2 goals from Freddy Adu<br />

would ultimately d<strong>is</strong>appoint the Canucks, both players<br />

performed extremely well and were recognized for their<br />

performances.<br />

May – Joe Gibson ’09 was<br />

recognized for h<strong>is</strong> academic<br />

endeavors with the prestigious John<br />

Chr<strong>is</strong>topher <strong>Hartwick</strong> Scholarship.<br />

Awarded on the bas<strong>is</strong> of academic<br />

achievement, leadership, and<br />

character, the John Chr<strong>is</strong>topher<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> Scholarship <strong>is</strong> the highest<br />

d<strong>is</strong>tinction the <strong>College</strong> can confer<br />

upon a student. The <strong>Hartwick</strong> Men’s<br />

Joe Gibson ’09 Soccer team was also recognized as<br />

a NSCAA Academic Team Award Winner with an overall<br />

3.2 team grade point average.<br />

October - At Homecoming Weekend, surrounded by family<br />

and friends, we celebrated the life of Mooch Myernick ’77<br />

during a memorial dedication. When Nancy Myernick ’77<br />

and Jeff Tipping ’78 spoke there was not a dry eye in the<br />

house. Doug Vandenburgh ’74 provided a toast to Mooch<br />

’77 and collectively the <strong>Hartwick</strong> soccer family ra<strong>is</strong>ed their<br />

glasses to salute one of our favorite sons.<br />

December - John Bluem ’75 led the<br />

Ohio State soccer program to a 17-<br />

4-5 record and a spot in the NCAA<br />

Div<strong>is</strong>ion I Championship game<br />

against Wake Forest.<br />

Carl Rees ’88 stands beside former teammate and fellow Hallof-Famer<br />

Paul Cushion ’87 at the 2008 <strong>Hartwick</strong> Athletic Hall of<br />

Fame Induction Ceremony.<br />

John Bluem ’75<br />

December - Liam Parrington ’11 and<br />

John Paul Boyle ’09 were recognized<br />

as NSCAA Regional All-Americans<br />

in addition to selection to all-star<br />

conference teams. Freshman Steven<br />

Amaya joined h<strong>is</strong> teammates on the<br />

2007 All-MAC teams.<br />

June – Carl Rees ’88 was inducted into the <strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />

Athletic Hall of Fame. It was a terrific night and vocal support<br />

from New York City, Philadelphia, Maryland, and England<br />

celebrated with Carl and the local soccer community. Hall of<br />

Famer Paul Cushion ’87 introduced Carl as our newest<br />

addition to the ’Wick HOF.<br />

July – “Re-Ignite the ’Wick” passes the $1.5 million mark….<br />

A remarkable effort by all of our alums, friends and supporters<br />

of the program. Thank you so much!<br />

35


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Soccer After <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> <strong>College</strong> has benefited from the<br />

efforts of many individuals who have been<br />

instrumental in the development of soccer<br />

in the United States. More than 40 former<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> players have entered professional<br />

soccer in the U.S. and overseas. Former<br />

coaches and players have joined national and<br />

professional teams as head coaches, ass<strong>is</strong>tant<br />

coaches, and front office staff members.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> graduates have been hired as<br />

coaches at all levels of NCAA colleges.<br />

NATIONAL TEAM AND PRO<br />

PLAYERS<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> has had numerous former players<br />

who have been involved with the United<br />

States National Team program.<br />

Mike Burns ’92, the 1991 `Wick captain,<br />

was a member of the 1994 U.S. World Cup<br />

team and played in all three games for the<br />

U.S. in the 1998 World Cup. He earned a<br />

total of 75 caps with the U.S. National Team<br />

from 1992-98.<br />

Burns <strong>is</strong> an original member of Major<br />

League Soccer’s New England Revolution. He<br />

retired from MLS after the 2002 season, and<br />

h<strong>is</strong> seven-year career included stints with<br />

New England, San Jose, and Kansas City.<br />

Matt Kmosko ’95 made three appearances<br />

with the national team and started every<br />

match at the 1993 World University Games.<br />

He played in the MLS for Columbus, Miami,<br />

and Colorado.<br />

Dominic Kinnear, who played at <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

In 2007, Matt Lawrence ’96 continued h<strong>is</strong><br />

professional career with Crystal Palace FC.<br />

during the 1985 season, saw action in 56<br />

games with the U.S. national team. Kinnear<br />

left <strong>Hartwick</strong> for an 11-year professional<br />

career, including MLS stops in Colorado, San<br />

Jose, and Tampa Bay.<br />

Other former <strong>Hartwick</strong> stars who have<br />

been selected to represent the United States<br />

include David D’Errico ’74, Eddie Hawkins<br />

’84, Glenn “Mooch” Myernick’77, and Doug<br />

Wark ’76. D’Errico earned 20 caps from 1974<br />

to 1977, while Hawkins made h<strong>is</strong> lone appearance<br />

against Ecuador in 1984. Myernick<br />

started four times for the U.S. Men’s Olympic<br />

Team in qualifying for the 1976 Olympics,<br />

captained the U.S. Men’s National Team<br />

in 1978 and retired from international play<br />

in 1979 with 10 appearances. Wark appeared<br />

in a match against Poland in 1975.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> graduates who are currently<br />

playing on the professional level include: Matt<br />

Lawrence ’96 (Crystal Palace, Engl<strong>is</strong>h First<br />

Div<strong>is</strong>ion), goalie Josh Wagenaar ’07 (ADO<br />

Den Haag in the Erediv<strong>is</strong>ie, Holland’s top<br />

professional div<strong>is</strong>ion), Andrew Sambrook<br />

’01 (Gray’s Athletic FC, Engl<strong>is</strong>h Second Div<strong>is</strong>ion),<br />

George Neofot<strong>is</strong>tos ’95<br />

(Levathiakos, Greek Third Div<strong>is</strong>ion). Edwin<br />

Ruiz ’04 was the first round pick of the MLS’s<br />

Kansas City Wizards in 2005, the 11th player<br />

drafted overall, and Tyler Hemming ’07 <strong>is</strong><br />

suiting up with Toronto FC of the MLS after<br />

being a supplemental pick in the draft.<br />

coaches who have contributed to the growth<br />

of soccer beyond the collegiate level. Each<br />

man has made h<strong>is</strong> own mark at the ’Wick as<br />

well as in the world of professional or international<br />

soccer.<br />

David Haase, who coached the Hawks<br />

from 1960 until 1966, was the director of<br />

player development for the Atlanta Chiefs of<br />

the North American Soccer League.<br />

Al Miller gained additional prestige as<br />

coach of the U.S. National Team. He also<br />

served as head coach of several teams in the<br />

NASL. As a general manager in the Major<br />

Soccer League (previously MISL), Miller<br />

helped the Cleveland Force gain success financially<br />

and on the field.<br />

Miller helped start h<strong>is</strong> own MSL team-the<br />

Cleveland Crunch. He <strong>is</strong> the former general<br />

manager of that club. Miller was inducted<br />

into the National Soccer Hall of Fame in 1995.<br />

Timo Liekoski ’71, who played for Miller,<br />

was an All-American defender at <strong>Hartwick</strong>.<br />

He later coached the Hawks from 1973 to<br />

1975 and posted a 30-9-7 mark. H<strong>is</strong> teams<br />

made three straight NCAA Tournament appearances.<br />

Liekoski was head coach of the United<br />

States Under-23 team as it prepared for the<br />

1996 Olympic Games. He served as an ass<strong>is</strong>tant<br />

coach for the United States National<br />

Team from June of 1991 until h<strong>is</strong> appointment<br />

as the Under-23 coach on October 6,<br />

1994. Liekoski was an ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach for<br />

Mike Burns ’92 earned 75 caps for the United<br />

States National Team between 1992-98<br />

PROFESSIONAL COACHES<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong>’s soccer program has been led<br />

by outstanding head coaches and ass<strong>is</strong>tant<br />

Dominic Kinnear led the Houston Dynamo<br />

to the 2006 MLS title.<br />

36


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

David D’Errico ’74, seen with soccer icon Pele, had a successful professional<br />

career both as a player and as a coach.<br />

the 1994 U.S. World Cup Team.<br />

He later took a position as the first coach<br />

of the Columbus Crew of MLS. Liekoski <strong>is</strong><br />

the current Finland Youth National Team<br />

coach. He has been a successful head coach<br />

in the NASL, MISL and NPSL.<br />

Former `Wick head coach Jim Lennox continued<br />

the great <strong>Hartwick</strong> tradition while becoming<br />

involved with soccer at the national<br />

level. He began working with the U.S. National<br />

“B” Team in 1989 and guided the U.S.<br />

efforts at the 1991 and ’93 World University<br />

Games. Lennox coached more than 60<br />

national team games.<br />

Myernick was an ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach at<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> for six years, from 1986-91. Following<br />

h<strong>is</strong> coaching career at h<strong>is</strong> alma mater,<br />

he served an ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach for the U.S. National<br />

Team at the 2002 and 2006 World<br />

Cups. Myernick served as an ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach<br />

for the 1996 U.S. Olympic Team in Atlanta,<br />

where the team went 1-1-1 and just m<strong>is</strong>sed<br />

advancing to the second round. Myernick also<br />

served as head coach of the United States<br />

Under-17 team and was an ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach<br />

for the the U.S. Under-20 team.<br />

Myernick was the head coach of MLS’s<br />

Colorado Rapids from 1997-2000, leading the<br />

Rapids to an appearance in MLS Cup ’97 in<br />

h<strong>is</strong> first season at the helm.<br />

Myernick served as an ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach for<br />

the U.S. National Team prior to h<strong>is</strong> death in<br />

October, 2006.<br />

Since ending h<strong>is</strong> playing career, Kinnear<br />

has excelled in the coaching profession. Today,<br />

he <strong>is</strong> in h<strong>is</strong> second season as head coach<br />

for the Houston Dynamo of the MSL. In<br />

2006, Kinnear piloted the Dynamo to the<br />

league title. He served three years as head<br />

coach for the San Jose Quake before the franch<strong>is</strong>e<br />

moved to Houston. Entering 2007, he<br />

sported a 38-22-34 career record.<br />

Other former players who have coached<br />

professionally include David D’Errico, Terry<br />

F<strong>is</strong>her, Steve Jameson and Billy Gazonas.<br />

D’Errico was a player and later an ass<strong>is</strong>tant<br />

with the New York Arrows (MISL) and was<br />

the head coach of the Charlotte Gold of the<br />

United Soccer League. F<strong>is</strong>her’s coaching experience<br />

included stints as an ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach<br />

with the San Jose Earthquakes, Houston Hurricanes,<br />

and Calgary Boomers of the NASL<br />

and the Detroit Lightning of the MISL.<br />

Gazonas, after playing several seasons with<br />

the Kansas City Comets, became the ass<strong>is</strong>tant<br />

coach of the MSL team. Jameson played<br />

and coached for the Rochester Flash of the<br />

American Soccer League. He also played professionally<br />

with the Sudbury Cyclones of the<br />

Canadian National Soccer League. Former<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> goalkeeper Mike Harr<strong>is</strong>on worked<br />

with the Aston Villa Football Club in England.<br />

SOCCER ADMINISTRATORS<br />

Franc<strong>is</strong>co Marcos, a 1968 graduate, <strong>is</strong> one<br />

of the most influential soccer leaders in the<br />

U.S. He <strong>is</strong> the president and chief executive<br />

officer of the United Soccer Leagues (USL),<br />

a league he founded 17 years ago. Marcos<br />

also <strong>is</strong> the comm<strong>is</strong>sioner of the A-League,<br />

ranked the second div<strong>is</strong>ion of soccer behind<br />

Major League Soccer.<br />

Nick Romansky, a 1978 graduate, <strong>is</strong> an orthopedic<br />

surgeon and works with the U.S.<br />

National Team.<br />

Jeff Tipping, also a 1978 graduate, has been<br />

serving as the Director of Coaching Development<br />

for the National Soccer Coaches Association<br />

of America since 2002. During h<strong>is</strong><br />

association with the NSCAA, he spent 13<br />

years as an ass<strong>is</strong>tant director of coaching,<br />

before being elevated to director of coaching<br />

in 1996.<br />

COLLEGE COACHES<br />

Many <strong>Hartwick</strong> alumni are coaching at the<br />

collegiate level. The current l<strong>is</strong>t of men’s head<br />

coaches includes: John Bluem ’75 (Ohio<br />

State); Mark Mettrick ’88 (Loyola University);<br />

Matt Kern ’88 (Wofford); Carl Rees ’89<br />

(Fairfield); Bryan Scales ’91 (Cornell); and<br />

Dave Gregson ’91 (Embry-Riddle). Geoff<br />

Bennett ’95, an ass<strong>is</strong>tant coach at <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

in 2003, <strong>is</strong> the head coach of the women’s<br />

team at Div<strong>is</strong>ion I Colorado <strong>College</strong>, while<br />

Matt Verni ’97 returned to <strong>Hartwick</strong> to take<br />

over the women’s program in April 2007.<br />

Jeff Tipping ’78 <strong>is</strong> flanked by Steve Long ’79 and Art Napolitano ’78<br />

37


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Mayor’s Mayor’<br />

Cup<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> killed two birds with one stone in a 3-0 victory over<br />

Seton Hall in the title game of the 2007 Mayor’s Cup. It not<br />

only got revenge for a 2-1 loss to the Pirates in the opening<br />

round of the 2005 NCAA Championships, but gave<br />

the Hawks the Mayor’s Cup title back.<br />

One of the major sporting events each year in the City of Oneonta<br />

<strong>is</strong> the Mayor’s Cup. Since 1976, <strong>Hartwick</strong> and Oneonta State had<br />

hosted two other NCAA Div<strong>is</strong>ion I teams in college soccer’s oldest<br />

regular-season tournament.<br />

In 2006, <strong>Hartwick</strong> was the sole host for the men’s tournament as<br />

Oneonta State realigned its men’s soccer program and transitioned<br />

back to Div<strong>is</strong>ion III status.<br />

In the 32nd edition in 2007, <strong>Hartwick</strong> blanked James Mad<strong>is</strong>on 1-0<br />

as Chr<strong>is</strong> Jackson converted a penalty kick in the first half. The<br />

Hawks pol<strong>is</strong>hed off the tournament and regained the trophy with a<br />

convincing 3-0 victory over Seton Hall in lousy playing conditions on<br />

a soggy and drenched Elmore Field in a rematch of a first round<br />

matchup in the 2005 campaign. For the second-straight season,<br />

Chr<strong>is</strong> Jackson ’08 was named<br />

the event’s Offensive MVP,<br />

while Liam Parrington ’11 was<br />

chosen as the Defensive MVP.<br />

In the previous year, Penn<br />

snapped <strong>Hartwick</strong>’s five-year<br />

stranglehold on the title, as<br />

the Quakers downed the<br />

Hawks 2-1 before dumping<br />

Mar<strong>is</strong>t 4-0 to win the title outright.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> defeated<br />

Towson 3-2 in overtime behind<br />

two goals from the tournament’s<br />

Offensive MVP, Jackson,<br />

including the game-winner<br />

in the 97th minute.<br />

The 33rd annual Mayor’s<br />

Cup Soccer Tournament will<br />

be a classic format for the<br />

eighth straight year, with the<br />

pairings pre-set for all four matches.<br />

Liam Parrington was named the<br />

2007 Mayor’s Cup Defensive MVP.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> will square off with Florida Gulf Coast at 7:30 p.m.,<br />

Friday, September 5 in the first-ever meeting between the two programs.<br />

The Hawks will then play UNC Wilmington Sunday afternoon<br />

at 1:30 p.m. Syracuse serves as the fourth team in the tournament.<br />

<strong>Hartwick</strong> has won 19 Mayor’s Cup titles overall.<br />

Mayor’s Mayor’<br />

Cup Finals<br />

1976 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 2, SIU-Edwardsville 1<br />

1977 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 1, Oneonta State 0 (OT)<br />

1978 - San Jose State 2, Oneonta State 1<br />

1979 - Cleveland State 3, <strong>Hartwick</strong> 1<br />

1980 - Cleveland State 4, Oneonta State 0<br />

1981 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 3, U.S. International 2<br />

1982 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 2, Oneonta State 1<br />

1983 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 4, Oneonta State 1<br />

1984 - Oneonta State 1, Bowling Green 0<br />

1985 - Alabama A&M 1, <strong>Hartwick</strong> 0<br />

1986 - Evansville 3, American 0<br />

1987 - Virginia 1, Boston University 0<br />

1988 - Akron 3, Old Dominion 2 (OT)<br />

1989 - Vermont 1, <strong>Hartwick</strong> 0<br />

1990 - UNC-Charlotte 2, <strong>Hartwick</strong> 1<br />

1991 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 3, Oneonta State 1<br />

1992 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 2, Monmouth 0<br />

1993 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 1, Portland 0<br />

1994 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 8, Towson State 0<br />

1995 - Georgetown 3, <strong>Hartwick</strong> 3 (OT)<br />

Georgetown won title on penalty kicks<br />

1996 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 4, William and Mary 1<br />

1997 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> 2, Pittsburgh 2<br />

1998 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> wins three-team tournament<br />

1999 - Oneonta State 1, <strong>Hartwick</strong> 0<br />

2000 - Virginia Commonwealth won tourney<br />

2001 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> won tournament<br />

2002 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> won tournament<br />

2003 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> won tournament<br />

2004 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> won tournament<br />

2005 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> won tournament<br />

2006 - Penn won tournament<br />

2007 - <strong>Hartwick</strong> won tournament<br />

38


2 0 0 8 H A R T W I C K S O C C E R<br />

Mid-American Conference<br />

In 2008, the Mid-American Conference will have a bit of a new<br />

look in men’s soccer. A year ago, <strong>Hartwick</strong><br />

replaced former affiliate member IPFW, which<br />

moved into the Mid-Continent Conference. In<br />

2008, Florida Atlantic was invited to join as an<br />

affiliate member. The full-fledged league members<br />

that sponsor men’s soccer include Akron, Bowling<br />

Green, Buffalo, Northern Illino<strong>is</strong>, and Western<br />

Michigan.<br />

The Mid-American Conference added men’s<br />

soccer to its resume in time for the 1993 campaign.<br />

In that year, Akron began its league dominance by<br />

capturing the league’s regular-season title. The Zips<br />

have either outright won or shared the title 10 out of 15 years. The<br />

University of Kentucky, a former member, stands in second with<br />

four regular-season titles, while Bowling Green <strong>is</strong> third with three.<br />

Marshall, Miami of Ohio, and Northern Illino<strong>is</strong> each have one to<br />

their credit.<br />

Despite playing the 1993 season, the conference didn’t hold<br />

its first league tournament until the following year. In 1994, Miami<br />

captured its lone tournament title. Since then,<br />

Akron has won five, while Bowling Green and<br />

Kentucky reg<strong>is</strong>tered three league tournament<br />

titles. Western Michigan and Northern Illino<strong>is</strong> have<br />

the other two. Akron returns as the league<br />

regular-season and tournament champion. The<br />

Zips downed Northern Illino<strong>is</strong> 2-1 in double<br />

overtime and beat Buffalo in the title game 1-0 to<br />

advance to the NCAA tournament. Akron fell to<br />

South Florida 1-0 in the opening round.<br />

The Zips have had past success in the NCAA<br />

Tournament. In 2003 and again in 2005, Akron<br />

advanced to the third round of the championship, which <strong>is</strong> the<br />

farthest a program in the league has gone.<br />

Elmore Field<br />

Elmore Field has been home to the men’s soccer program<br />

since 1956. Including their 3-1-3 home record in 2007, the<br />

Hawks have a 261-74-25 record on their home turf. The<br />

postseason has been even better, with <strong>Hartwick</strong> winning 23 of<br />

26 outings.<br />

The field, constructed in 1949, was made possible by a gift<br />

from Earl Elmore, who owned feed mills in downtown Oneonta.<br />

In 1987, <strong>Hartwick</strong> played its home games at Damaschke<br />

Field in Oneonta while Elmore was reconstructed, giving the<br />

field excellent drainage. The renovation created bleacher seating<br />

for up to 2,000 fans and increased Elmore’s field size to<br />

120’ X 75’, full regulation length and width.<br />

Former <strong>Hartwick</strong> soccer player John Bronson ’70 donated<br />

funds to put lights on Elmore in time for the 1998 season.<br />

Fans traveling to Elmore in 2008 will notice some additional<br />

changes to the complex. During the 2007 camapign, a<br />

memorial in honor of the late and former <strong>Hartwick</strong> great Glenn<br />

“Mooch” Myernick ’77 was added at the base of the complex.<br />

Signage boards, which surround the pitch, give Elmore a much<br />

different look as well. <strong>Hartwick</strong> will also be adding other fixtures<br />

to the complex in the coming years.<br />

39

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