This is what a college should look like.

Transcription

This is what a college should look like.
“This is what a college
should look like.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower
34th President of the United States
Dartmouth Men’s Soccer... The Tradition Continues
Ivy League Championships (7)
1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
Table of Contents
Men’s Soccer Information
Program Began . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1915
Total Games Played/Record . . . . . . . . . . 954/445-412-97 (.517)
Home Field/Capacity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chase Field/2,000
Playing Surface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Natural Grass
Head Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jeff Cook (Bates ’89)
Email Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . jeff.cook@dartmouth.edu
Record at Dartmouth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39-29-17 (5 seasons)
Overall Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114-93-34 (13 seasons)
Assistant Coaches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Leigh Sillery, Bill Lawler
Volunteer Assistant Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Matt Ristuccia
Captains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brian Lappas, Lucas Richardson
Administrative Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shirley Barnes
Soccer Office Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (603) 646-3545
Soccer Office Fax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (603) 646-3348
2005 Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-3-5
2005 Ivy League Record/Finish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-1-1/Tie-First
Postseason . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NCAA Second Round
Letterwinners Returning/Lost . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20/5
Starters Returning/Lost . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8/3
Newcomers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Sports Information
Men’s Soccer Contact . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TBA
Email . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TBA
Office Phone Number . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (603) 646-2468
Sports Information Fax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (603) 646-1286
DART-line (scores, highlights) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (603) 646-3278
Home Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www.DartmouthSports.com
College Information
Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hanover, N.H. 03755
Founded . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1769
Enrollment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,300 undergraduates
Nickname . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Big Green
Colors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dartmouth Green, White
Conference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ivy League
College President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . James Wright
Athletic Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Josie Harper
Affiliations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NCAA Division 1, ECAC
Credits
Tom Lobben (No. 13) and Scott Darci (No. 7) celebrate a
goal.
On the front cover: Co-captain Brian Lappas (No. 2) and co-captain
Lucas Richardson (No. 3).
The 2006 Dartmouth men’s soccer guide was written and edited by
Gordon Morton, Assistant Sports Information Director, with editorial assistance from Cindi Mansell and Kathy Phillips. Photos by Mark
Washburn, Brian Lincoln, Heath Mason, Chris Richardson, Tom McNeill,
Joseph Mehling, Dave Mengle and Fred Zodda.
DCAD/WCI/8-06/1250
Page Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
This is Dartmouth College . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inside Front Cover
College Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
The Dartmouth Experience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Head Coach Jeff Cook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Assistant Coaches/Support Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Season Outlook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-7
Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Player Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-13
2005 Statistics/Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Honors and Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-16
The Record Book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17-19
Dartmouth Overseas/Success After Graduation . . . . . . . . . 20
Athletic Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inside Back Cover
Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Back Cover
NCAA Tournament Appearances (9)
1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
C o ll e g e A d m i n i s t r ati o n
James Wright
Jo Ann “Josie” Harper
President
Director of Athletics
James Wright is the 16th president of
Dartmouth College. Wright has been
a member of the Dartmouth faculty
since 1969. He received a bachelor’s
degree from Wisconsin State UniversityPlatteville and master’s and doctoral
degrees in history from the University
of Wisconsin at Madison. An American
historian, his teaching and research focused on American political
history and the history of the American West. He is the author or
editor of five books: The Galena Lead District: Federal Policy
and Practices, 1824-1847 (1966); The West of the American
People (1970); The Politics of Populism: Dissent in Colorado
(1974); The Great Plains Experience: Readings in the History
of a Region (1978); and The Progressive Yankees: Republican
Reformers in New Hampshire (1987). He received a Social
Science Research Council Grant, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and
a Charles Warren Fellowship at Harvard.
James Wright served as Dean of the Faculty from 1989-97
and as Acting President of the College during the first six months
of 1995, while President James O. Freedman was on sabbatical.
President Wright served as Provost from 1997 to 1998 and was
elected to the Dartmouth presidency in April 1998. He took office
on August 1, 1998.
President Wright has been elected to the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences, and he is a member of the Organization of
American Historians, the Western History Association, and the
New Hampshire chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. He serves on the
board of trustees of the Sherman Fairchild Foundation and recently completed a term as chair of the Council of Ivy Presidents.
As president, his priorities have included advancing the
academic strength of the institution and expanding the faculty; enhancing the out-of-the-classroom experience; an ambitious facilities agenda that includes academic, residential life,
and athletic projects; and enhancing financial aid resources to
ensure access to Dartmouth for students from the full range of
backgrounds. He has increased the diversity of the student body
while also maintaining the College’s academic strength. He has
also served on the NCAA Division I Board of Directors and the
NCAA Task Force on Reform.
President Wright is married to Susan DeBevoise Wright, who
has served in various roles in student life at Dartmouth since
1978. He has a daughter, two sons, and seven grandchildren.
Robert Ceplikas
Deputy Athletic
Director
Page Brian Austin
Sr. Associate
Director of Athletics
Jo Ann “Josie” Harper, a prominent figure in collegiate athletics and a highly
regarded coach, is the Big Green’s
director of athletics and recreation.
She assumed the leadership role for
Dartmouth athletics in June, 2002.
Harper is Dartmouth’s seventh athletic director and the first woman to
hold this position both at Dartmouth and in the Ivy League.
Harper joined the Dartmouth staff in July, 1981, as head
coach of women’s lacrosse. In July, 1987, she assumed additional
responsibilities as assistant director of athletics for intercollegiate
programs, where she developed and administered recruiting support for coaches and served as liaison to the Dartmouth Athletic
Sponsor Program, among other duties. In July, 1990, she was promoted to associate director of athletics while continuing to coach
women’s lacrosse.
She was promoted to senior associate director of athletics in
June, 1999, and in that capacity was responsible for long-range
planning, scheduling, personnel recruitment, budget, alumni relations and event management for all of Dartmouth’s varsity athletic
teams.
A graduate of West Chester University, Harper figured prominently as a lacrosse coach on the national and intertional level. In
1986, she coached the U.S. World Cup team, and she assisted with
the 1982 United States team that won the World Championship
in England. She was inducted into the New England Lacrosse
Hall of Fame in June, 2000, and the Pennsylvania Lacrosse Hall
of Fame in February, 2002. In November, 2003, she was honored
as an inductee into the Sturzebecker Foundation Hall of Fame of
West Chester University and West Chester admitted her into its
Athletics Hall of Fame in 2004. In November, 2006, Harper will
be inducted into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame.
In May, 1999, she was inducted into Dartmouth’s “Wearers of
the Green,” a celebration every five years that salutes outstanding
Big Green coaches and athletes. Harper was honored in the category of coaching a national or Olympic team.
Harper is the 2005 recipient of the Katherine Ley Award,
presented by the ECAC in recognition of her leadership and advocacy for women coaches and administrators. In 2000, Harper was
named the NACWAA (National Association of Collegiate Women
Athletic Administrators) Division I-AA administrator of the year.
In 2001, Harper was honored as the ECAC female athletic administrator of the year. In 2003, she was adopted by Dartmouth’s
Class of 1947.
Megan Drucker Sobel
Sr. Associate
Director of Athletics
Brian Corcoran
Equipment Manager
The Dartmouth Experience
The Whole Experience
Town and Gown Relationship
Dartmouth soccer has a unique
relationship with the local Upper
Valley community. Attend any
men’s game and you will see a
mixed bag of supporters including
toddlers, high school teenagers,
parents, professors and, of course,
students. A Dartmouth soccer
game is an event in the soccercrazy Upper Valley, and much of
this stems from the special relationship that the Dartmouth soccer programs have fostered within the community. The liaison
begins with the Dartmouth coaches, who serve as the primary
directing body of the Upper Valley Lightning soccer program,
and continues through the men’s players, who become known to
the youngsters by helping out at clinics and as coaches.
It begins in the spring when the local Upper Valley
Lightning Soccer Program, in conjunction with Dartmouth soccer, runs a series of clinics for under-8, under-10 and under-12
children in the Upper Valley area. This is a wonderful discovery
time for the young players, who are led by the Dartmouth coaching staff and assisted by the college players. With the Dartmouth
players acting as role models during this romantic phase in the
children’s development, it is easy to see how these youngsters
fall in love with the sport and graduate from the clinics into the
travel team program which runs from under-13 to under-19.
Many of these travel teams are headed by the Dartmouth men’s
and women’s soccer coaches and players themselves, and traditionally are some of the strongest club teams in the state of
New Hampshire.
The Dartmouth Cup — an 85-team tournament held at the
College during Memorial Day weekend — is the highlight and
the culmination of the spring season and features teams from all
over the Eastern Seaboard and Canada. Again, the Dartmouth
players get heavily involved through refereeing, coaching and
promotion of the Big Green programs.
The Dartmouth Experience
Ask any member of the Dartmouth family to define this phrase,
and most will struggle for the precise words. That’s because
every Dartmouth Experience, like
every log in the Homecoming
bonfire and every snowflake in the
Winter Carnival snow sculpture, is
somewhat similar yet at the same
time distinctly different.
The Dartmouth Experience
is formed by the College’s many
traditions, like Dartmouth Outing
Club trips in the New Hampshire
wilderness, where the newest
members of the Dartmouth community are baptized and bonded
through hiking boots, backpacks,
trail mix — and friendships. Or
when the entire freshman class
dons jerseys emblazoned with
their class year and stands for an
entire football game. It’s also the
multitude of encounters that flavor
everyday life at Dartmouth.
The Dartmouth Experience
comes in the classroom and latenight study sessions in the ’02
Room in Baker Library, when 200
pages of reading suddenly makes
perfect sense. It’s the camaraderie on the field, in the locker
room and on the bus rides back to
Hanover after a game.
It’s thoughtful discussions with some of the nation’s brightest minds, who turn out to be peers as well as professors.
It’s criss-crossing the trails at the Dartmouth Skiway, hiking
to the top of Mount Moosilauke or walking along scenic Occom
Pond. It’s watching as the bulk of your wardrobe of sweatshirts
and sweaters gradually is transformed into one predominant
color — Dartmouth green.
It’s pepperoni pizza with dorm mates on Thursday night
and all-you-can-eat brunch in Thayer Dining Center on Sunday
morning. It’s the chill that goes up your spine and the feeling
of pride that overwhelms you during the singing of the Alma
Mater.
It’s walking to class and knowing nine of the ten people
you meet along the way. It’s manipulating satellite images for
a geography class, studying Beethoven or flipping a frisbee
around the Green on a warm spring afternoon.
Page Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
The player who wants to play soccer at the top collegiate level
will find that and more at Dartmouth College. The men’s and
women’s teams have become two of the elite programs on the
College’s outstanding athletic ledger — the men, in particular,
have won six Ivy League championships since 1988 and have
advanced to the NCAA championship second round four times
since 1990 (including quarterfinal appearances in 1990 and
1992); in addition, the Big Green has become a springboard to
the pro game, as several recent graduates have moved on to join
the professional ranks.
From the indoor training sessions in the winter and spring
practices, to the strength and conditioning throughout the offseason, to work with youth programs and summer camps, clinics and teams and finally the varsity season in the fall, Dartmouth
is truly a year-round soccer experience. There is enough to become
involved in for the elite varsity
competitor and also the developing player. If you want an outstanding education and love soccer, Dartmouth College has the
perfect environment.
Sports Illustrated once wrote
that “Dartmouth is ideal for an
athlete with brains.” In keeping
with that statement, it can also be
said that Dartmouth is ideal for the
soccer player with brains.
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
Jeff Cook • Head Coach
Jeff Cook enters his sixth season as the Dartmouth head
coach, and he’s already done
something that no Big Green
men's soccer coach has ever
done — win back-to-back Ivy
League titles.
Cook owns a 39-29-17
record in his first five seasons
on the bench for the Big Green
and a 114-93-34 mark in 13
years as a head coach.
Last season, he guided the
team to its second straight Ivy
title and its third Ancient Eight crown in the past four years. The
team earned its second consecutive trip to the NCAA tournament and for the first time in school history was seeded as one
of the top 16 teams in the field.
In 2004, Cook guided the Big Green to the Ivy crown and
its first NCAA tournament appearance since 2000.
In 2003, Dartmouth was unbeaten in its first six games and
earned a Top-25 national ranking, before injuries dashed the
hopes of another Ivy title and NCAA appearance.
During the 2002 campaign, Cook led the Big Green to a
9-7-1 record and the school’s fifth Ivy championship. Despite
playing one of the nation’s toughest schedules, Dartmouth narrowly missed qualifying for the NCAA tournament.
In 2001, Cook’s first season at Dartmouth, he guided the
Big Green to a 7-7-2 mark. Despite having a young squad, Cook
led the Big Green to numerous highlights during the course of
the season — including wins over two nationally-ranked programs. In Cook’s first game, the Big Green upset No. 9 Wake
Forest, 1-0, and later in the season, Dartmouth knocked off No.
24 Fairfield, 2-0.
Prior to taking over at Dartmouth, Cook was the head coach
at the University of Cincinnati from 1996-2000. He was named
the 1997 Conference USA coach of the year after guiding his
squad to a 7-8-3 record. He led the Bearcats to the school’s first
NCAA berth in 1998 and a national ranking as high as 15th in
1999. The Bearcats finished with an impressive record of 12-53. The 12 wins were the most by a Cincinnati soccer team since
1989.
In only his second stint as a head coach, Cook had a tough
road ahead of him. He inherited a struggling program that was
just 37-60-6 in five years prior to his arrival. However, Cook
quickly turned the program around and reversed that to a 4442-13 mark from 1996-2000.
Cincinnati earned a Conference USA tournament bid
during each of Cook’s five years, advancing to the semifinals
twice. Two of his players earned NSCAA All-America honors,
the first such recognition for a Bearcat player.
A 1989 graduate of Bates College, Cook began his coaching career as an assistant at the University of Massachusetts
before becoming the head coach at Division III Wheaton where
he posted a 31-22-4 record.
Page Year
1991
1992
1993
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
Totals
• The Book on Cook •
Team
Wheaton
Wheaton
Wheaton
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Dartmouth
Dartmouth
Dartmouth
Dartmouth
Dartmouth
At DC - 5 seasons
Overall - 13 seasons
W-L-T
6-10-2
13-6-1
12-6-1
7-12-3
7-8-3
12-5-3
11-8-1
7-9-3
7-7-2
9-7-1
6-9-2
7-3-7
10-3-5
39-29-17 (.559)
114-93-34 (.544)
After a 6-10-2 season in 1991, Cook guided Wheaton to
consecutive appearances in the ECAC tournament. In his second season, Cook led the Lyons to a 13-6-1 record and followed
that with a mark of 12-6-1 in 1993.
Cook is no stranger to the Dartmouth soccer program as
he was an assistant coach under Fran O’Leary from May 1994
to February 1996. Cook also was director of coaching for the
extensive Lightning Soccer program in the Upper Valley.
While with the Bearcats, he held a similar position with the
Cincinnati Classics Soccer Club which included 40 teams and
more than 600 players.
Cook holds a UEFA ‘A’ license which he obtained in June
of 2005 from the Scottish Football Association. He also holds
a U.S. Soccer ‘A’ license and the NSCAA Advanced National
Diploma.
Cook and his wife Christina reside in Hanover, N.H., with
their two sons, Liam (9) and Kieron (6).
T h e S ta f f
LEIGH SILLERY
Assistant Coach
MATT RISTUCCIA
Volunteer Assistant Coach
After graduating from Wheaton College
in 2005, Matt Ristuccia is now in his second season as a volunteer assistant coach
with Dartmouth. An All-NEWMAC and
All-New England selection, Ristuccia was
voted the 2004 team MVP and won the
Wheaton Scholar-Athlete Award.
In addition to his playing background, Ristuccia already has a great deal
of coaching experience. During the spring
of his senior year, he served as an assistant
coach at Wheaton. Over the course of the past year, Ristuccia was the head
coach of the South Coast Crusaders, a boy’s under-14 club soccer team in
Plymouth, Mass. Prior to that, he was an assistant coach with the F.C. Greater
Boston Bolts, another U-14 club team.
For the past two years, Ristuccia was a member of the Wheaton Athletic
Mentors, serving as its president during the past year. He also worked as an
intern to the director of athletics and the sports information director.
Ristuccia also is the managing director and a coach of the Upper Valley
Lightning soccer club based in Hanover.
Assistant Coach
Bill Lawler, an assistant men's soccer
coach at Skidmore College last season
and a former Big Green assistant under
Fran O'Leary in 2000-01, has returned
to Hanover and begins his second tour of
duty an assistant men's soccer coach at
Dartmouth. He will have primary responsibility for the goalkeepers with the Big
Green.
Prior to his stint at Skidmore,
Lawler was the head coach at
Manhattanville College during the 2004
season. His team reached the ECAC Metro Region championship and recorded the most postseason wins in school history.
During the 2003 season, he worked as an assistant coach at Babson
College, his alma mater. While working with the goalkeepers and serving
as a varsity assistant, he also served as the head coach of the junior varsity
program. He held a similar position at Babson during the 1998 and 1999
seasons.
From April of 2001 through July of 2003, he was an assistant coach at
George Mason University and goalkeeper coach. He also directed the George
Mason Indoor Soccer Tournament in 2002 and 2003. It was an 88-team indoor
soccer tournament that was the biggest fundraiser for the program.
Lawler's stint in Hanover came from August of 2000 through April of
2001. He worked with the goalkeepers and helped the squad reach the NCAA
tournament in 2000.
As a player, Lawler helped Babson to the 1998 ECAC tournament
championship and was voted the Most Valuable Player of the ECAC tournament. He was the Constitution Athletic Conference Goalkeeper of the Year in
1997 and 1998. Lawler received his bachelor's degree in business management with a major in American Studies.
He has played professionally with the Worcester Wildfire of the ALeague in 1998 and the Rhode Island Stingrays of the USISL in 1999 and
New Hampshire Phantoms of the USISL in 2000.
Lawler currently holds a USSF ‘D’ License.
DAVE KANG
Faculty Advisor
Dave Kang is Associate Professor of
Government, and Adjunct Associate
Professor and Research Director at the
Center for International Business at the
Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth.
He has been a volunteer assistant with
the Dartmouth men’s soccer program for
seven years, working with the reserve
squad, as well as being faculty advisor for
the men’s and women’s soccer programs.
A native of Livermore, Calif., Kang was
a varsity letterwinner in soccer at Stanford University. Upon graduation he
played for PAC in the San Jose Major Division. He has also assisted as a coach
in the Upper Valley Lightning program.
In his academic capacity, Kang’s books include Crony Capitalism:
Corruption and Development in South Korea and the Philippines (Cambridge
University Press, 2002), Nuclear North Korea: A Debate on Engagement
Strategies (co-authored with Victor Cha) (Columbia University Press, 2003),
and a forthcoming book on China’s rise and East Asia’s response.
Kang received an A.B. with honors from Stanford University and his
Ph.D. from Berkeley.
Page Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
Leigh Sillery, most recently associate head
men’s soccer coach at George Mason, is
now in his second season as the top assistant coach at Dartmouth and third season
overall with the Big Green. Prior to his promotion to associate head coach at George
Mason, Sillery served as an assistant coach
for the Patriots for three seasons. This is
Sillery’s second stint as an assistant coach
with the Big Green – he also spent the 1995
season in Hanover under then head coach
Fran O’Leary.
A native of Glengormley, County Antrim, in Northern Ireland, Sillery’s
ties with O’Leary stretch back to his playing days at Elmira (N.Y.) College
in 1990-91 and at Kenyon (Ohio) College in 1992-93. Sillery earned AllRegion honors from the National Soccer Coaches Association of America
(NSCAA) each of his four years in college, and he was a first team AllAmerican at Kenyon in 1993 as the Lords were ranked No. 1 in the nation
and advanced to the Division III Final Four. He also earned All-North Coast
Athletic Conference first team honors each of his seasons at Kenyon, and he
was named the NCAC Player of the Year in 1992. In June 2004, Sillery was
selected for the North Coast Athletic Conference’s Twentieth Anniversary
team.
Prior to coming to the United States to play collegiately, he was a member of the Northern Ireland Schoolboy and Youth national teams, making 20
international appearances. As a youth player, he helped lead Linfield Football
Club to two national championships.
Sillery earned his bachelor’s degree in history in 1995 from Kenyon
College. He served in a municipal capacity in Belfast, Northern Ireland, from
November 1997-August 2001, and prior to that, he spent a year as a financial
consultant for Ulster Bank Ltd. in Belfast. Sillery holds a UEFA ‘A’ license
and the NSCAA Advanced National Coaching Diploma.
BILL LAWLER
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
Roster
No. 2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
31
Name
Brian Lappas
Lucas Richardson
Peter Savidis
Matt Carroll
Pumi Maqubela
Mark Limpert
Mike Ordonez
Craig Henderson
Dani Rothenberg
Jacob Aguiar
Nick Christman
Tom Lobben
Rowan Anders
Bryan Park
Andrew Quigley
Ale Frischeisen
Taylor Alan-Lee
Alex Spinoso
Nate Mathis
Daniel Keat
Derek Stenquist
Sean Milligan
Sean Milich
Donnie Surdoval
Matt Miller
Paul DuPuy
Justin Schwarz
Pos.
M
B
B/M
M
B
F
M
M/F
F
B
M
B
GK
M/F
F
B
B
F
F
M
M
GK
M
B/M
M
M
GK
Cl.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Fr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
So. So.
Fr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Ht.
5-10
6-2
5-10
5-7
5-10
5-11
6-1
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-9
6-4
5-8
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-6
6-0
5-10
5-9
6-5
5-10
6-0
5-7
5-10
5-10
Wt.
150
185
160
150
165
150
175
155
160
165
145
155
190
150
155
145
165
150
145
165
155
230
145
170
155
165
160
High School/Hometown
East Chapel Hill/Hillsborough, N.C.
Cherry Creek/Denver, Colo.
Gates Chili/Rochester, N.Y.
Brooks School/North Andover, Mass.
Philips Academy/Andover, Mass.
Elizabethtown/Elizabethtown, Pa.
Coral Gables/Coral Gables, Fla.
Taita College HS/Wellington, New Zealand
Riverwood/Atlanta, Ga.
Plymouth/Plymouth, Ind.
Falmouth/Falmouth, Mass.
Chaminade/Glen Head, N.Y.
Kwalikum Secondary/Qualicum Beach, B.C.
Palos Verdes/Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif.
Shawnee Mission Northwest/Lenexa, Kan.
New Hyde Park Memorial/Garden City, N.Y.
La Jolla Country Day/Solana Beach, Calif.
Jesuit H.S./Wilton, Calif.
Charlotte Latin School/Monroe, N.C.
Hutt Intl. Boys’ School/Wellington, New Zealand
The Rivers School/Hudson, Mass.
Staples/Westport, Conn.
Torrey Pines/San Diego, Calif.
Delbarton School/Sparta, N.J.
Hun School (Trinity College)/Skillman, N.J.
St. Albans School/Washington, D.C.
Valley Central/Newburgh, N.Y.
The 2005 team immediately after winning its second consecutive Ivy title. (Photo by Heath Mason)
Page C a p ta i n s
#3 Lucas Richardson
#2 Brian Lappas
Sr. • B • 6-2 • 185
Cherry Creek/Denver, Colo.
Jr. • M • 5-10 • 150
East Chapel Hill/Hillsborough, N.C.
Lappas’s Career Statistics
Year
2004
2005
Totals
GP/GS
16/5
16/14
32/19
Goals
0
0
0
2005: Earned first team All-Ivy honors... Third team All-New England
selection... Started all 18 games in the
central defense... Named to the AllTournament team at the Yale Classic...
Scored the game-winning goal against
Drake in the opening round of the
adidas/Dartmouth Classic... Named
the Ivy League and ECAC Player of the Week on 10/10 after
scoring the gamewinner in 1-0 victory at Yale... 2004: Earned
second team All-Ivy accolades... Named the team’s most valuable player... Tallied the game-tying goal in the 89th minute
in a 1-1 draw with Penn.... Started all 17 games in the back...
2003: Played in seven matches... Earned starts against Maine,
Vermont and Holy Cross... High School: Two-time letterwinner
at Cherry Creek High School... Voted three-time captain of club
team... Played for the Colorado Rush Nike under-17 team.
Richardson’s Career Statistics
Assists
1
2
3
Points
1
2
3
Year
2003
2004
2005
Totals
GP/GS
7/3
17/17
18/18
42/38
Goals
0
1
2
3
Assists
0
0
0
0
Points
0
2
4
6
Page Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
2005: Honorable mention All-Ivy
pick... Saw action in 16 games and
earned 14 starts... Named to the AllTournament team at the Yale Classic...
Picked up an assist in win over
Oneonta State... Tallied an assist in
victory over Cornell... 2004: Played
in 16 games and earned five starts...
Tallied an assist in win over Bradley... High School: Three-time
All-Conference pick... Earned All-State honors as a senior...
Helped lead team to four straight conference titles and one
regional championship... National Honor Society member...
Participated in 2003 adidas ESP program.
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
P l ay e r P r o f il e s
#14 Rowan Anders
#11 Jacob Aguiar
Sr. • GK • 6-4 •190
Kwalikum Secondary/
Qualicum Beach, B.C.
Sr. • B • 5-11 •165
Plymouth/Plymouth, Ind.
2005: Selected to the ESPN the
Magazine Academic All-America
District I first team... Played and started in 17 matches... Picked up his first
collegiate point with an assist against
Rhode Island at the Dartmouth adidas Classic... Named the Ivy League
Player of the Week on 9/6 after earning a spot on the all-tournament team at the Matador Soccer
Invitational hosted by Cal State Northridge... 2004: Started all
17 games in the back... 2003: Did not play due to injury... High
School:Two-time team captain... Three-time All-Conference
selection... Selected the team’s most valuable offensive player
during his junior and sophomore seasons, and the most valuable
defensive player as a sophomore.
Tied for fifth all-time in career shutouts at Dartmouth with 13... 2005:
Earned first team All-Ivy League honors... Tied Dartmouth single season
record with eight shutouts... Tied for
first in the Ivy League in shutouts...
Ranked second in the Ivy League
and 13th in the country in GAA...
Placed fourth in the conference in save percentage and sixth in
saves... Played and started in 17 matches... Earned a spot on the
all-tournament team at the Matador Soccer Invitational hosted
by Cal State Northridge... 2004: Earned first team All-Ivy honors... Led the Ivy League in GAA... Allowed only three goals
in seven Ivy games, the lowest total in Dartmouth history...
Posted five shutouts, including four against Ivy opponents...
2003: His 30 saves led the team and ranked eighth in the Ivy
League... Started eight matches and played 764:38 minutes...
Posted a 1.53 goals against average and a .698 save percentage... Made three saves in tie with Richmond... Surrendered one
goal in draw with Maine... Made five saves and earned victory
against Vermont... Recorded a season-high seven saves against
Harvard... High School: Three-year starter at Kwalikum
Secondary School... Guided his team to a 17-1-1 record as a
senior... Played for the under-17 British Columbia Provincial
Boys All-Star team... Voted team’s most inspirational athlete
and most valuable player as a senior.
#18 Taylor Alan-Lee
Jr. • B • 5-11 •165
La Jolla Country Day/
Solana Beach, Calif.
2005: Did not play due to injury...
2004: Did not play due to injury...
High School: Led La Jolla to Coastal
League championship and city championship... Three-time All-CIF selection... Two-time All-Coastal League
pick ... Personal: His uncle, Scot
Brewster, played football at Dartmouth and graduated in 1979.
Page Anders’ Career Statistics
Year
2003
2004
2005
Totals
GP
8
16
17
41
Min
764:38
1546:30
1606:30
3917:38
GA
13
14
12
39
GAA
1.53
0.81
0.67
0.90
Sv Sv%
30.698
55.797
51.810
136 .777
W-L-T
1-5-2
7-3-6
9-2-5
17-10-13
Sho
0
5
8
13
P l ay e r P r o f il e s
#27 Paul DuPuy
#5 Matt Carroll
Sr. • M • 5-10 • 165
St. Albans School/ Washington, D.C.
So. • M • 5-7 • 150
Brooks School/North Andover, Mass.
2005: Did not see any varsity action...
2004: Played on the reserve team...
2003: Did not play soccer... High
School: Ran cross country and track
for two years and served as captain of
both squads... First team All-League
pick in both sports as a senior...
Personal: His father, Karl DuPuy,
was a wrestler at Dartmouth and is a member of the Class of
1964.
#17 Ale Frischeisen
#12 Nick Christman
Jr. • B • 5-11 • 145
New Hyde Park Memorial/
Garden City, N.Y.
Jr. • M • 5-11 • 145
Falmouth/Falmouth, Mass.
2005: Saw action in eight games and
earned two starts... Tallied the gamewinning goal against Rhode Island
at the adidas/Dartmouth Classic...
Selected to the ESPN the Magazine
Academic All-America District I second team... 2004: Appeared in 12
games... Worked his way into the starting lineup for the final
six matches of the season, including the NCAA tournament
game against Boston University... High School: Team captain
for two years... All-State selection as a junior... Division I South
MVP at 2002 Eastern Massachusetts All-Star Game... Led Old
Colony League in scoring in 2002.
2005: Appeared in 18 games and
earned 17 starts... 2004: Played in six
matches and had three starts... High
School: Team captain... Led team
to conference championship... Played
club soccer for the Albertson Clash...
Club team won the regional championship and was a national finalist.
Christman’s Career Statistics
Frischeisen’s Career Statistics
Year
2004
2005
Totals
GP/GS
12/6
8/2
20/8
Goals
0
1
1
Assists
0
0
0
Points
0
2
2
Year
2004
2005
Totals
GP/GS
6/3
18/17
24/20
Goals
0
0
0
Assists
0
0
0
Points
0
0
0
Page Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
2005: Played in 17 games and earned
two starts... Recorded his first collegiate point by assisting on game-winning goal against Princeton... Also
tallied an assist three days later in
victory over Oneonta State... High
School: Team captain... All-State and
All-New England selection... Also
was a member of the wrestling team.
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
P l ay e r P r o f il e s
#9 Craig Henderson
#7 Mark Limpert
So. • M/F • 5-10 • 155
Taita College HS/
Wellington, New Zealand
Sr. • F • 5-11 • 150
Elizabethtown/Elizabethtown, Pa.
Selected to the New Zealand Under20 national team... 2005: Played in
16 games and earned three starts...
Tallied his first collegiate goal in win
over Oneonta State... Scored first Ivy
League goal in victory over Harvard...
Scored game-tying goal in 85th minute against Brown to help Dartmouth
secure share of Ivy title... High School: Team won two New
Zealand National Youth League championships... Four-time
selection as most outstanding/promising high school player...
Won Taita Cup for Sportsman of the Year in 2002-03... Fourtime high school champion in badminton... Also played tennis
and ran cross country... Personal: Played for the New Zealand
Under-17 national team in 2003.
Enters the season tied for 25th in
career goals with 13 and tied for 34th
all-time in scoring at Dartmouth with
28 points (13G, 2A) ... 2005: Played
in 18 games and earned five starts...
Tallied an assist at Brown... 2004:
Earned a spot on the All-Ivy first
team... Led the team and ranked second in the Ivy League with seven goals... Placed second in the
Ivies with three game-winning goals... 2003: Ranked second on
the team and fourth in the Ivy League in goals scored with six...
Also ranked eighth in the league in points... Won the team’s Will
Shue Award as the top freshman... Tallied a goal in his first two
collegiate games... Scored in season opener against Duquesne
on 9/13 and followed that up with a goal against Richmond on
9/14... Tallied goals in three consecutive games versus Vermont
on 9/25, St. Bonaventure on 9/28 and New Hampshire on 10/1...
Scored team’s only goal against Columbia... High School:
Team co-captain as a senior... Voted team’s most valuable player
as a junior... Two-time Lancaster/Lebanon All-Star... Posted a
79-27 record as a varsity wrestler... Named to the Pennsylvania
All-Academic team.
Limpert’s Career Statistics
Henderson’s Career Statistics
Year
2005
Totals
Page 10
GP/GS
16/3
16/3
Goals
3
3
Assists
0
0
Points
6
6
Year
2003
2004
2005
Totals
GP/GS
17/7
17/17
18/5
52/29
Goals
6
7
0
13
Assists
0
1
1
2
Points
12
15
1
28
P l ay e r P r o f il e s
#23 Sean Milligan
#13 Tom Lobben
Jr. • B • 5-9 • 155
Chaminade/Glen Head, N.Y.
So. • GK • 6-5 • 230
Staples/Westport, Conn.
2005: Played in two matches and
earned one start... Named Ivy League
Rookie of the Week on 10/24 after
making seven saves and posting shutout against Columbia in his first collegiate start... High School: Team
captain... NSCAA Academic All-New
England selection... Also played basketball and volleyball... Personal: His father, Marty, played
football at Dartmouth and graduated in 1977.
#8 Mike Ordonez
Jr. • M • 6-1 • 175
Coral Gables/Coral Gables, Fla.
Lobben’s Career Statistics
Year
2004
2005
Totals
GP/GS
16/12
15/14
31/26
Goals
0
0
0
Assists
1
0
1
Points
1
0
1
2005: Honorable mention All-Ivy
selection... Saw action in 16 games
and made nine starts... Finished second on the team in goals scored with
four... Ranked third on the squad in
scoring with eight points... Tallied a
goal in tie with Michigan State and
wins over Princeton, Oneonta State and Columbia... Led the
team with three game-winning goals... 2004: Ranked fourth
on the team in scoring with five points... Played in 16 games
and made 10 starts... Tallied goals against Boston College and
Brown... Registered an assist versus Cornell... High School:
Spent time in Argentina where he played with second division
and third division teams... adidas ESP camp participant... Also
played with Uruguay Soccer Club.
#24 Sean Milich
So. • M • 5-10 • 145
Torrey Pines/San Diego, Calif.
2005: Did not appear in any varsity
games... High School: Helped lead
Torrey Pines to the CIF Division
I championship as a senior... Named
to the San Diego Union Tribune AllAcademic soccer team... Also played
volleyball... Personal: His father,
Brian, played water polo at UC Davis... Avid surfer and snowboarder... Enjoys backpacking in the Sierra Nevada mountains
and has reached the summit of Mt. Whitney (14,495 ft.).
Ordonez’s Career Statistics
Year
2004
2005
Totals
GP/GS
16/10
16/9
32/19
Goals
2
4
6
Assists
1
0
1
Points
5
8
13
Page 11
Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
2005: Appeared in 15 games and
earned 14 starts... 2004: Won the
team’s Will Shue Award as the top
freshman... Played in 16 games and
had 12 starts... Registered an assist in
3-2 win over Temple... High School:
Team captain... CHSAA League MVP
as a senior... Catholic All-State team
as a junior... Also played volleyball and was CHSAA League
MVP.
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
P l ay e r P r o f il e s
#16 Andrew Quigley
#4 Peter Savidis
Jr. • F • 5-11 • 155
Shawnee Mission Northwest/
Lenexa, Kan.
Sr. • B/M • 5-10 • 160
Gates Chili/Rochester, N.Y.
2005: Saw action in 10 games,
including five Ivy League matches...
2004: Played in four matches... High
School: Team captain... Second-team
All-Sunflower League as a sophomore and a junior... Second team AllSun Country and honorable mention
All-Metro as a junior.
Quigley’s Career Statistics
Year
2004
2005
Totals
GP/GS
4/0
10/0
14/0
Goals
0
0
0
Assists
0
0
0
2005: Played in all 18 games and
made 12 starts... Tallied an assist in
at UNH... 2004: Appeared in three
games and made one start before
his season was cut short due to injury... 2003: Limited by injuries... Saw
action in six matches and earned four
starts... 2002: Made 16 appearances,
contributing a goal and one assist... High School: Named team
captain as a junior... All-Great Rochester first team selection...
Selected most valuable player of the sectional finals... Two-time
All-County first team pick... NSCAA High School Scholar AllAmerican... Member of the New York ODP team.
Points
0
0
0
#10 Dani Rothenberg
So. • F • 5-11 • 160
Riverwood/Atlanta, Ga.
2005: Did not see any varsity action...
High School: Team captain... Member
of Georgia ODP team... National honor society... Class vice president...
Personal: Was born in Johannesburg,
South Africa.
Page 12
Savidis’s Career Statistics
Year
2002
2003
2004
2005
Totals
GP/GS
16/9
6/4
3/1
18/12
43/26
Goals
1
0
0
0
1
Assists
1
0
0
1
2
Points
3
0
0
1
4
P l ay e r P r o f il e s
Newcomers
#31 Justin Schwarz
Jr. • GK • 5-10 • 160
Valley Central/Newburgh, N.Y.
2005: Did not see any varsity action...
2004: Played on the reserve team...
High School: Three year starter at
Valley Central... Team captain as a
junior and senior... Section 9 all star...
Team reached section 9 championship
game... Class valedictorian.
Daniel Keat
Fr. • M • 5-10 • 165 • Hutt Intl. Boys' School/Wellington, New
Zealand
Selected to the New Zealand Under-20 national team in
2006... High School: Named the National League Youth
Player of the Year in 2004-05... Named the Wellington
Schools Sportsman of the Year in 2005.
#6
Pumi Maqubela
Fr. • B • 5-10 • 165 • Phillips Academy/Andover, Mass.
High School: New England Prep School Soccer Association
(NEPSSA) All-Star... Member of Massachusetts ODP.
#19 Alex Spinoso
Jr. • F • 5-6 • 150
Jesuit/Wilton, Calif.
#20
2005: Missed the season due to injury... 2004: Played in one game before
being sidelined by injuries... High
School: Helped lead Jesuit to 29-01 record and high school national
championship... Selected to 2003 AllCity team.
Spinoso’s Career Statistics
Year
GP/GS
2004
1/0
2005
Totals
1/0
Goals
0
DNP-INJ
0
Assists
0
Points
0
0
0
Nate Mathis
Fr. • F • 6-0 • 145 • Charlotte Latin/Monroe, N.C.
High School: Three-time all-conference and two-time allregion and all-state selection... Helped team to 2003 and 2004
state titles... Personal: His brother, Adam, played soccer at
Barton College in Wilson, North Carolina.
#26
Matt Miller
So. • M • 5-7 • 155 • Hun School (Trinity College)/Skillman, N.J.
Transferred from Trinity College... 2005: Played in 12 games
for Trinity and ranked second on the team in scoring with
four points... Scored goals against Bates and Tufts... High
School: Team captain... First team All-State selection in
2003 and 2004... Personal: His father, Chip Miller, is a 1985
Dartmouth graduate and played soccer for the Big Green.
#15
Bryan Park
Fr. • M • 5-8 • 150 • Palos Verdes/Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif.
High School: Has experience with the U-16, U-17, U-18
and U-20 South Korean Youth National teams... Listed by
StudentSportsSoccer.com as one of the "Class of 2006:
National Players to Watch"... Personal: Has dual citizenship
in U.S. and South Korea.
#22
Derek Stenquist
Fr. • M • 5-9 • 155 • The Rivers School/Hudson, Mass.
High School: Team captain... First team All-State as a
senior... Three-time All-Independent Schools League first
team selection... Class president in 2002-03.
#25
Donnie Surdoval
Fr. • B/M • 6-0 • 170 • Delbarton School/Sparta, N.J.
Lucas Richardson proudly holds the Ivy trophy.
(Photo by Chris Richardson)
High School: Team captain... Helped team to county, conference and state titles in 2003 and 2004... First team All-County
and All-Conference pick as a senior... Honorable mention
All-State selection as a senior... Personal: His cousin, James
DePiero, played soccer at Vermont... His cousin, Robbie
DePiero, played soccer at Marist.
Page 13
Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
#21
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
2 0 0 5 S tati s tic s / R e s u lt s
2005 Ivy League Standings
2005 Results
(10-3-5, 5-1-1 Ivy)
9/3
9/5
9/10
9/16
9/18
9/23
9/25
10/2
10/5
10/8
10/12
10/15
10/23
10/26
10/29
11/6
11/12
11/22
vs. San Diego#
at Cal State Northridge#
FAIRFIELD
vs. American@
vs. Michigan State@
DRAKE%
RHODE ISLAND%
PRINCETON*
ONEONTA STATE
at Yale*
VERMONT
at Penn*
COLUMBIA*
at New Hampshire
at Harvard*
CORNELL*
at Brown*
at St. John's^
T, 0-0 (2ot)
L, 3-0
T, 1-1 (2ot)
W, 1-0
T, 2-2 (2ot)
W, 2-1
W, 2-1
W, 1-0 (ot)
W, 2-0
W, 1-0
T, 0-0 (2ot)
L, 1-0 (2ot)
W, 1-0
W, 2-0
W, 2-1
W, 2-0
T, 2-2 (2ot)
L, 1-0
# Cal State Northridge Matador Soccer Invitational
@ Yale Classic
% adidas Classic at Dartmouth
^ NCAA Tournament (second round)
* Ivy League
Team
Dartmouth
Brown
Yale
Princeton
Penn
Harvard
Cornell
Columbia
Ivy
Pct.
5-1-1 .786
5-1-1.786
5-1-1.786
3-3-1.500
2-4-1.357
2-4-1.357
2-5-0.286
1-6-0.143
2005
G-A-Pts
6-1-13
2-6-10
4-0-8
3-0-6
2-1-5
2-0-4
1-0-2
1-0-2
0-2-2
0-2-2
0-1-1
0-1-1
0-1-1
Goalkeepers
Name
GP Min
Rowan Anders
Sean Milligan
17
2
National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA)
All-New England
Lucas Richardson (third team)
12 0.67
1 0.78
P.J. Scheufele
Page 14
GF
21
33
27
16
24
23
14
11
Second Team All-Ivy
Darnell Nance
Svs SHo GA GAA
8
1
All
Pct.
10-3-5 .694
11-5-2.667
10-4-4.667
6-8-3.441
9-6-1.594
6-8-2.438
3-10-2.267
4-12-1.265
First Team All-Ivy
Rowan Anders
Lucas Richardson
P.J. Scheufele
Career
G-A-Pts
7-3-17
3-10-16
6-1-13
3-0-6
16-9-41
3-0-6
5-3-13
1-0-2
0-2-2
0-3–3
13-2-28
1-2-4
0-1-1
1606:30 51
115:46 8
GA
4
6
4
6
10
14
13
8
2005 Honors
2005 Scoring Leaders
Player
Darnell Nance
P.J. Scheufele
Michael Ordonez
Craig Henderson
Scott Darci
Lucas Richardson
Amar Takhar
Nick Christman
Matt Carroll
Brian Lappas
Mark Limpert
Peter Savidis
Jacob Aguiar
GF
9
15
10
6
7
9
6
3
GA
13
14
16
18
17
26
25
21
Honors/Awards
Ivy League Championships (7)
1964, 1988, 1990, 1992,
2002, 2004, 2005
1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992
1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
NSCAA All-America
1941 — Richard Geppart ’42, Gordon Smith ’42
1943 — Charles Stebbins, ’44
1944 — Jim Osborne Jr. ’47, Robert
Roberts ’45, Herbert Van Ingen,
USMC
1946 — Al Bildner ’47, Leland Fancher ’49
1950 — Jackson Hall ’53
1951 — Jackson Hall ’53
1952 — Jackson Hall ’53, John Rice ’53
1953 — Bob Drawbaugh ’54
1953 — Carl Hirsch ’56
1958 — David Blake ’61
1962 — David Smoyer ’63
1962 — Robert Mattoon ’63
1967 — Leon Myrianthopoulos ’69
1968 — Charles Silcox ’71
1969 — Charles Silcox ’71
1979 — Paul Mott ’80
1990 — Danny Sankar ’91, John Milne ’92
1991 — John Milne ’92
1992 — Justin Head ’93
1994 — Ian Saward ’95
1998 — Bobby Meyer ’99
1955 — Egil Stigum, Clem Malin
1956 — Randy Malin
1957 — Randy Malin
1958 — Jim Kennedy, Dave Blake
1959 — Don Betterton
1960 — Steve Chase, John Stobo
1961 — Jerry Pepper, Dave Smoyer
1962 — John Stobo, Dave Smoyer
1963 — Ivars Bebris
1964 — Edwin Knapp
1965 — Pete Barber
1966 — Bill Smoyer, Edmund Harvey
1967 — Leon Myrianthopoulos
1968 — Charlie Silcox
1969 — Charlie Silcox
1971 — Rich Gifford
1973 — Frank Gallo
1974 — Bruce Bokor, Steve Papai
1975 — Bruce Bokor, Steve Papai
1977 — Lyman Missimer
1978 — Paul Mott, Tom Ryan
1979 — Paul Mott
1981 — Tim May, Andy Krahling
1983 — Tom Heise
1985 — Mark Sachleben, Jim Cisneros
1987 — Vladdy Stanojevic,
Fred Woodhouse
1988 — Doug MacGinnitie, Andrew Shue,
Yngvar Hvistendahl
1990 — Danny Sankar, John Milne
1991 — John Milne
1992 — Justin Head, Ian Saward
1993 — Ian Saward, Asa Marokus,
Methembe Ndlovu
1994 — Hunter Paschall, Ian Saward
1996 — Bobby Meyer
1997 — Bobby Meyer, Brendan Reidy,
Matt Nyman
1998 — Bobby Meyer
2000 — Nick Magnuson
2002 — Scott Darci
2003 — Rob Daly
2004 — Rowan Anders, Mark Limpert, Oliver Harker-Smith
2005 — Rowan Anders, Lucas Richardson, P.J. Scheufele
Second Team All-Ivy
Doug MacGinnitie
Ivy League Players of the Year
1988 — Doug MacGinnitie
1992 — Justin Head
Ivy League Rookies of the Year
1988 — John Milne
1992 — David Moran
2000 — Matt LaBarre
2002 — Doug Carr
1972 — Frank Gallo
1973 — Bruce Bokor
1974 — Steve Alford
1976 — Tim Ehrsam, Charlie Krupanszky, Tom Ryan
1977 — Tom Ryan
1980 — Tim May, Andy Krahling
1981 — Steve D’Antonio, Tom Heise
1982 — Tom Heise
1984 — Mark Sachleben
1986 — Julian Okwu, Yngvar Hvistendahl, Fred Woodhouse, John Scott
1987 — Doug MacGinnitie,
Yngvar Hvistendahl
1988 — Vladdy Stanojevic, John Milne
1989 — Vladdy Stanojevic, John Milne
1990 — Richie Graham, Justin Head, Fraser Leversedge
1991 — Tommy Clark, Jesse Bradley
1992 — Blaine LeGere, Geoff Wheeler, Brian Wiese
1993 — Brian Wiese
1994 — Blaine LeGere, Asa Marokus, Brian Wiese
1995 — Hunter Paschall, Brendan Reidy, Methembe Ndlovu
1996 — Methembe Ndlovu,
Brendan Reidy
1997 — Chris Dedicik, Chris Pedrick,
Zach Samol
1998 — Chris Dedicik, Chris Pedrick, Brendan Reidy, Matt Nyman
2000 — Matt LaBarre, Scott Lish
2001 — Damien Quinn,
Ben Gebre-Medhin
2002 — Matt Miller, Doug Carr
2003 — Oliver Harker-Smith
2004 — Scott Darci, Darnell Nance,
Lucas Richardson, P.J. Scheufele
2005 — Darnell Nance
Honorable Mention All-Ivy
1973 — Jeff Badmington, Keith Mierez
1974 — Jim Tierney, Mark Porto
1975 — Charlie Krupanszky, Tom Ryan, Lyman Missimer
1976 — Ted Hunt
1977 — Mark Schneider
1978 — Tim Ehrsam, Leo Markkula, Lyman Missimer
1979 — Andy Krahling
1980 — Brian Hitchcock, Tom Heise
1983 — Marcel Frederique, Paul Bayer, Jim Cisneros
1984 — Ed Short, Jim Cisneros
1985 — Gene Shue, Ed Short,
Fred Woodhouse
1986 — Vladdy Stanojevic, Andrew Shue
1987 — Fraser Leversedge, John Scott
1988 — Andrew Wiese, Jesse Bradley, Fraser Leversedge
1989 — Fraser Leversedge
1991 — Andrew Wiese
1992 — David Moran, Geoff Zawtocki, Chris Mitchell, Asa Marokus
1993 — Geoff Zawtocki, David Moran, Blaine LeGere
1994 — Methembe Ndlovu
1995 — Bobby Meyer, Noah Waterhouse
1996 — Tui’one Faleafa
1997 — Nick Magnuson, Tui’one Faleafa
1998 — Gareth Jones, Tui’one Faleafa
1999 — Nick Magnuson, Scott Lish
2000 — Damien Quinn, Tom Billings,
Matt Miller, Mike Vidmar,
Ben Gebre-Medhin
2001 — Matt Miller
2002 — Juan Romera, Mike Vidmar,
Scott Lish
2003 — Seth Eaton
Page 15
Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
NCAA Appearances (9)
First Team All-Ivy
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
Honors/Awards
Most Valuable Player
1976 — Charles Krupanszky
1977 — Lyman Missimer
1978 — Lyman Missimer,
Tom Ryan
1979 — Paul Mott
1980 — Andrew Krahling
1981 — Andrew Krahling
1982 — Tom Heise,
Paul Bayer
1983 — Paul Bayer
1984 — Chris Mendelsohn
1985 — Jim Cisneros
1986 — Julian Okwu
1987 — Vladdy Stanojevic
1988 — Doug MacGinnitie
1989 — Jono Sollinger
1990 — Danny Sankar
1991 — John Milne
1992 — Justin Head
1993 — Brian Wiese
1994 — Ian Saward
1995 — Hunter Paschall
1996 — Methembe Ndlovu
1997 — Bobby Meyer
1998 — Chris Pedrick
1999 — Nick Magnuson
2000 — Nick Magnuson
2001 — Ben Gebre-Medhin
2002 — Matt Miller, Scott Lish
2003 — Oliver Harker-Smith
2004 — Lucas Richardson
2005 — P.J. Scheufele
Most Improved Player
2003 — Justin Bain
2004 — Fred Ochieng
2005 — Ale Frischeisen, Brian Lappas
Bobby Meyer
Page 16
Norman Grant Clark Trophy
Methembe Ndlovu
Will Shue Award
(Presented annually to the outstanding freshman on the men’s soccer team)
1986 — Vladdy Stanojevic
1987 — Andrew Wiese
1988 — John Milne
1989 — Justin Head
1990 — Geoff Zawtocki
1991 — Blaine LeGere
1992 — David Moran
1993 — Methembe Ndlovu
1994 — Keith Zadourian
1995 — Bobby Meyer
1996 — Mike Lewis
1997 — Nick Magnuson
1998 — Dan Markman
1999 — Matt Miller
2000 — Matt LaBarre
2001 — Scott Darci
2002 — P.J. Scheufele
2003 — Mark Limpert
2004 — Tom Lobben
2005 — Craig Henderson
(Presented annually for contributions on and
off the field)
1951 — Jay Gintel
1952 — John Fancher
1953 — John Rice
1954 — Roland Addis
1955 — Dave Conlan
1956 — Steve Winslow
1957 — Randall Malin, Cal Perry
1958 — Randall Malin
1959 — Mitchell Engle
1960 — Larry Holden
1961 — Jerry Pepper
1962 — Robert Mattoon
1963 — John Carpenter
1964 — Carl Amon
1965 — Larry Geiger
1966 — Chip Harvey
1967 — Ed Heald
1968 — Peter Linton
1969 — Greg Church
1970 — Allen Goodloe
1971 — Jim Neville
1972 — John Grossman
1973 — Frank Gallo
1974 — Mark Porto
1975 — Bruce Bokor
1976 — Ted Hunt
1977 — Kent Pierce
1978 — Tom Ryan
1979 — Dave Hansmann
1980 — Brian Hitchcock
1981 — Chris Morrison
1982 — Tom Herold
1983 — Paul Bayer
1984 — Scott Mellen
1985 — Ed Short
1986 — Bob Mitchell
1987 — Fred Woodhouse
1988 — Ted Henderson
1989 — Ken Himmelman
1990 — Todd Gibby
1991 — Andrew Wiese
1992 — Geoff Wheeler
1993 — Bepi Raviola
1994 — Blaine LeGere
1995 — John Bosacco
1996 — David Moran
1997 — Keith Zadourian
1998 — Brendan Reidy
1999 — Mike Lewis
2000 — Robbie Barbero
2001 — Danny Markman
2002 — Scott Lish
2003 — Tom Billings
2004 — Oliver Harker-Smith
2005 — Scott Darci
The Record Book
NCAA Tournament Record
Team Records
18
14
11
11
7
Five times (most recent- 2005)
1990 (14-2-2)
1982 (2-11-1)
1995 (6-11-0)
2004 (7-3-7)
Winning Streak
18
1953-55
(began 10/10/53 vs. UConn; ended 10/15/55 with loss to Penn)
Unbeaten Streak
18
1953-55 (Same as above)
Losing Streak
11
1982
Winless Streak
11
Single-Game
Goals
Single-Season
Goals
Assists
Points
Shutouts
1982 (Same as above)
10
10
10
10
1925 vs. MIT
1938 vs. Fitchburg State
1951 vs. Brandeis
1989 vs. Brown
43
37
121
9
1990 (18 matches)
1990 (18 matches)
1990 (18 matches)
2005
Individual Records
Goals
Game
7
Season
18
Career
33
Assists
Game
4
Season
10
10
Career
21
Points
Game
10
Season
39
Career
79
Saves
Season
Career
239
619
Goals Against Average
Season
Career
Shutouts
Season
Career
1964
Trinity
Hartford, Conn.
L, 1-2
1977
Brown
Providence, R.I.
L, 1-2
1978
Connecticut
Storrs, Conn.
L, 0-4
1990
1990
1990
Vermont
Hanover, N.H.
T, 1-1 (2ot)*
* Dartmouth advances on penalty kicks, 4-1
Columbia
Hanover, N.H.
W, 2-1
Rutgers
New Brunswick, N.J. L, 0-1
1992
1992
1992
St. John’s
Seton Hall
Virginia
Hanover, N.H.
Orange, N.J.
Charlottesville, Va.
W, 1-0
W, 4-3
L, 0-3
1997
1997
Boston Univ.
SMU
Hanover, N.H.
Dallas, Texas
W, 5-1
L, 0-2
2000
Connecticut
Storrs, Conn.
L, 0-3
2004
Boston Univ. Boston, Mass.
T, 2-2 (2ot)^
^ Boston Univ. advances on penalty kicks, 4-3
2005
St. John's
Jamaica, N.Y.
L, 1-0^
^ second round game (Dartmouth was No. 16 seed
and had first round bye)
NCAA Record: 4-8-2
Morton Fletcher ’23
(1922 vs. Williams)
Bob Drawbaugh ’54 (1953)
Bob Drawbaugh ’54 (1951-53)
Vladdy Stanojevic ’90
(10/31/89 vs. Brown)
Bruce Bokor ’76 (1974)
Danny Sankar ’91 (1990)
Vladdy Stanojevic ’90 (1986-89)
Vladdy Stanojevic ’90 (10/31/89 vs. Brown)
Vladdy Stanojevic ’90 (1987)
Vladdy Stanojevic ’90 (1986-89)
David Smoyer ’63 (1961)
Larry Geiger ’66 (1963-65)
0.24
0.89
Donald Swanson ’54 (1953)
John Scott ’88 (1984-87)
8
8
16
16
Rowan Anders '07 (2005)
John Scott ’88 (1986)
Jesse Bradley ’92 (1988-91)
Matt Nyman ’99 (1995-98)
The Big Green handed Boston University a 5-1 defeat in the first
round of the 1997 NCAA tournament in Hanover.
Page 17
Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
Matches Played
Matches Won
Matches Lost
Matches Tied
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
The Record Book
Career Leaders
Points
Name
1. Vladdy Stanojevic
2. Bob Drawbaugh
3. Egil Stigum
4. Andre Stollmeyer
5. Doug MacGinnitie
6. Hunter Paschall
7. Al Bildner
8. Chris Mitchell
9. Justin Head
10. Harold Eckhardt
Goals
Name
1. Bob Drawbaugh
2. Egil Stigum
3. Vladdy Stanojevic
4. Andre Stollmeyer
5. Al Bildner
Doug MacGinnitie
7. Harold Eckhardt
8. Hunter Paschall
9. Bob Merriam
10. Richie Graham
Justin Head
Assists
Name
1. Vladdy Stanojevic
2. Bruce Bokor
3. Matt LaBarre
4. Andrew Shue
5. Fraser Leversedge
Nick Magnuson
Damien Quinn
8. Chris Mitchell
9. Tommy Clark
Blaine LeGere
Peter Linton
Methembe Ndlovu
Saves
Name
1. Larry Geiger
2. David Smoyer
3. Robert McGee
4. Lyman Missimer
5. Mark Porto
6. John Orange
7. Andrew Krahling
8. Jim Cisneros
9. Ben Gebre-Medhin
10. Jesse Bradley
Year
1986-89
1951-53
1953-55
1929-31
1986-88
1992-95
1945-46
1991-94
1989-92
1939-41
Goals
28
33
30
27
23
20
23
16
18
21
Assists
21
0
0
0
7
7
0
13
8
0
Points
77
66
60
54
53
47
46
45
44
42
Vladdy Stanojevic
Goals Against Average
Years
1951-53
1953-55
1986-89
1929-31
1944-46
1985-88
1939-41
1992-95
1945-47
1987-90
1989-92
Goals
33
30
28
27
23
23
21
20
19
18
18
Years
1986-89
1973-75
2000-03
1985-88
1986-90
1997-00
2000-03
1991-94
1988-91
1991-94
1967-69
1993-96
Assists
21
20
18
17
14
14
14
13
12
12
12
12
Years
1963-65
1960-62
1966-67
1975-78
1972-74
1968-70
1979-81
1982-85
1999-01
1988-91
Saves
619
539
324
307
283
261
251
242
199
193
Name
1. Doug Carr
2. John Scott
3. Don Swanson
4. Matt Nyman
5. Jesse Bradley
6. Gregg Lemkau
7. Brian Wiese
8. Daniel Carroll
Clement Malin
10. Andrew Krahling
Shutouts
Name
1. Jesse Bradley
Matt Nyman
3. Brian Wiese
4. John Scott
5. Rowan Anders
Ben Gebre-Medhin
7. Jim Cisneros
Andrew Krahling
Lyman Missimer
10. Clement Malin
Doug Carr
Page 18
Gregg Lemkau
Years
2002
1984-87
1952-53
1995-98
1988-91
1988-90
1992-94
1944-46
1953-55
1979-81
GAA
0.87
0.89
0.98
1.05
1.07
1.09
1.14
1.22
1.22
1.25
Years
1988-91
1995-98
1992-94
1984-87
2003-
1999-01
1982-85
1979-81
1975-78
1953-55
SHO
16
16
15
14
13
13
9
9
9
8
The Record Book
Season Leaders
7, Morton Fletcher vs. Williams, 1922
Points
Goals
Name
1. Bob Drawbaugh
2. Allen Bildner
3. Vladdy Stanojevic
Andre Stollmeyer
5. Egil Stigum
Egil Stigum
Buck Waid
8. Rob Daly
John Daniels
Bob Drawbaugh
Justin Head
Doug MacGinnitie
Hunter Paschall
Name
1. Bruce Bokor
Danny Sankar
3. Damien Quinn
Vladdy Stanojevic
Geoffrey Zawtocki
6. Bruce Bokor
Justin Head
Matt LaBarre
Nick Magnuson
Paul Mott
P.J. Scheufele
Andrew Shue
Year
1987
1990
1995
1988
1987
1992
2003
2000
1996
1998
Points
33
28
24
24
23
22
20
20
20
19
Year
1953
1946
1987
1929
1954
1955
1954
2003
1947
1952
1992
1988
1995
Goals
18
15
14
14
13
13
13
10 10
10
10
10
10
Year
1974
1990
2000
1989
1992
1975
1990
2000
1998
1979
2005
1988
Assists
10
10
7
7
7
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
5, Al Bildner vs. Tufts, 1945
5, Al Bildner vs. MIT, 1946
5, Bob Drawbaugh vs. Williams, 1953
5, Egil Stigum vs. Connecticut, 1955
Tommy Clark
Saves
Name
1. David Smoyer
2. David Smoyer
3. Larry Geiger
4. Larry Geiger
5. Larry Geiger
6. C. Goldthwaite
7. Robert McGee
8. Robert McGee
9. John Orange
10. Lyman Missimer
Year
1961
1962
1964
1965
1963
1960
1966
1967
1970
1978
Goals Against Average
Name
1. Donald Swanson
2. Clement Malin
3. John Scott
4. Rowan Anders
Dean Couper
Matt Nyman
7. Kenneth Soule
7. Jesse Bradley
Brian Wiese
10. Rowan Anders
Shutouts
Name
1. Rowan Anders
John Scott
3. Matt Nyman
4. Jesse Bradley
Jesse Bradley
Doug Carr
Andrew Krahling
Matt Nyman
John Scott
Brian Wiese
Saves
239
227
226
203
190
183
170
154
126
115
Year
1953
1954
1986
2005
1933
1997
1947
1989
1993
2004
GAA
0.24
0.50
0.58
0.67
0.67
0.67
0.70
0.76
0.76
0.81
Year
2005
1986
1997
1989
1991
2002
1980
1998
1987
1993
SHO
8
8
7
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
4, William Marx vs. MIT, 1925
4, Harry Benson vs. New Hampshire, 1926
4, Andre Stollmeyer vs. Syracuse, 1929
4, Andre Stollmeyer vs. MIT, 1929
4, Andre Stollmeyer vs. Rutgers, 1930
4, Thomas Eagan vs. Rutgers, 1930
4, Andre Stollmeyer vs. MIT, 1931
4, Harold Eckhardt vs. UMass, 1939
4, Dick Deane vs. UMass, 1941
4, Louis Heller vs. Tufts, 1944
4, Bob Merriam vs. Tufts, 1947
4, John Daniels, MIT, 1947
4, Bob Drawbaugh vs. UMass, 1953
4, Egil Stigum vs. Brown, 1955
3, Paul Woodbridge vs. MIT, 1925
3, J. E. Zanger vs. MIT, 1925
3, Harry Benson vs. Amherst, 1926
3, Leonard Schmitz vs. Wesleyan, 1927
3, William Marx vs. Springfield, 1927
3, Andre Stollmeyer vs. Northeastern, 1929
3, Andre Stollmeyer vs. MIT, 1930
3, John Shelmire vs. Brown, 1932
3, Dean Gidney vs. RPI, 1933
3, Dean Gidney vs. Fitchburg St., 1934
3, George Bailey vs. Harvard, 1936
3, George Bailey vs. Fitchburg St., 1938
3, Pedro Salom vs. Fitchburg St., 1938
3, Jim Pert vs. Coast Guard, 1943
3, Jim Pert vs. Tufts, 1943
3, John Daniels vs. UMass, 1947
3, John Hart vs. UMass, 1950
3, Chet Caswell vs. Brown, 1952
3, Carl Hirsch vs. Boston Univ., 1953
3, Egil Stigum vs. UMass, 1954
3, Buck Waid vs. UMass, 1954
3, Buck Waid vs. RPI, 1954
3, Bob Rhines vs. Connecticut, 1957
3, Don Betterton vs. MIT, 1959
3, Mark Schneider vs. Princeton, 1977
3, Steve Brooks vs. Amherst, 1979
3, Vladdy Stanojevic vs. Brown, 1989
3, Chris Mitchell vs. UMass, 1993
3, Hunter Paschall vs. Yale, 1994
3, Chris Dedicik vs. Boston Univ., 1997*
3, Rob Daly vs. Iona, 2003
3, Rob Daly vs. St. Bonaventure, 2003
* NCAA tournament
David Smoyer
Page 19
Ivy League Champions: 1964, 1988, 1990, 1992, 2002, 2004, 2005
Name
1. Vladdy Stanojevic
2. Danny Sankar
3. Hunter Paschall
Doug MacGinnitie
5. Doug MacGinnitie
6. Justin Head
7. Rob Daly
Matt LaBarre
Methembe Ndlovu
10. Chris Pedrick
Assists
Goals in a Game
NCAA Tournament: 1964, 1977, 1978, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2005
D a r t m o u t h S o cc e r O v e r s e a s / S u cc e s s A f t e r G r a d u ati o n
Scotland Trip
Success After Graduation
by J.P. Barbosa ’04
International travel has become a feature of the Dartmouth soccer experience. Since 1987, the Dartmouth men’s soccer team
has traveled six times to Scotland as part of our pre-season
preparations, playing against some of Europe’s most renowned
clubs. In keeping with the NCAA rules regarding international
travel, we travel once every four years to take in the cultural and
sporting experience of the “football mad” country. Each member of a Dartmouth class has this opportunity and the memories
of these trips are a significant part of what our players take away
from their time at Dartmouth.
Each trip makes an effort to combine practice sessions,
games and cultural experiences for all of the players on the trip.
We have had the good fortune to train at some of Scotland’s
most outstanding training centers, play an outstanding caliber of
“fitba” and see some of Europe’s renowned history first-hand.
The Scotland tour provides an opportunity for our program to
develop lasting relationships with coaches and players who have
a commitment and passion to the world’s greatest sport.
In our last venture overseas (2002) we trained every day
on beautifully manicured fields and challenged clubs such as
Queen’s Park, Celtic and Rangers. Additionally, we witnessed
two Scottish Premier League games and one U-19 Scottish
national team match. We also toured Ibrox Stadium and Celtic
Park, and visited the newly constructed, state of the art Rangers
training facility; a complex which included three full time
chefs, four full time masseuses, an indoor field, six grass fields,
three field turf fields, and an exact replica of the pitch found
in Ibrox (loaded with overhead panoramic video cameras and
underground heating). The trip, however, was not spent entirely
on soccer. We participated in a team hike in which we almost
lost our assistant coach over a cliff, visited the monument of
William Wallace (“Braveheart”), saw the home of the Loch
Ness Monster, and
explored the cities of Edinburgh,
Largs and Glasgow.
All in all, the
Scotland tour was
an amazing experience, an experience
that opened all of
our eyes to a new
and interesting culture. Most importantly, however, the
trip served as an
excellent bonding
experience and the
jumping off point
for a very successful season in which
we claimed our first
Ivy League title
in more than ten
years.
That’s Edinburgh Castle above these Dartmouth
players.
Page 20
Paul Mott ’80
A two-time first team All-Ivy selection and an NSCAA All-America pick,
Mott was a member of two NCAA
tournament teams at Dartmouth. His
six assists as a senior still ranks as
the sixth-best single season performance at Dartmouth.
Mott was a first-round pick of
the Tampa Bay Rowdies of the North
American Soccer League and played
for two seasons before a severe
ankle injury forced him to hang up
his boots.
After a successful career working as vice president of operations
for the Dallas Burn of Major League
Soccer, Mott moved to the MLS front
office as vice president of special
projects.
In 2001, he moved to the NBA
front office, where he worked as senior director of team marketing and business development. Then in April of 2005, Mott was hired as the president of the
NBA's New Orleans Hornets. He oversees all business aspects of the franchise,
including strategic planning, business development, marketing and branding,
and day-to-day operations.
Andrew Shue ’89
A first team All-Ivy selection as a
senior, Shue helped lead his team to
the 1988 Ivy League title. One of the
most unselfish players on the team,
Shue graduated second all-time in
career assists at Dartmouth with 17
and still ranks fourth all-time. His
33 points were 11th best when he
graduated and still place 24th in the
Dartmouth record book.
Since graduation, Shue has
enjoyed a diverse career as an
actor, producer, professional soccer
player and business entrepreneur.
After leaving Hanover, he spent a
year living in Zimbabwe, playing
in the African First Division for the
Bulawayo Highlanders. In the debut
season of Major League Soccer in
1996, he earned a spot with the
Los Angeles Galaxy. His most memorable moment came back in his home
state of New Jersey when he helped to set up two goals in a 4-0 win over the
MetroStars in front of 50,000 fans at Giants Stadium. He retired in 1997 after
two seasons.
Shue followed his sister Elisabeth's path when he ventured into acting. For six years during the 1990s, he starred on the Fox TV show "Melrose
Place," where he played the likeable Billy Campbell. Along the way, he had his
greatest acting experience playing a pivotal role in Francis Ford Coppola's "The
Rainmaker."
More recently, Shue has created several start-up ventures, including
ClubMom, the nation's leading membership organization for moms with three
million members. Shue's creation of Ursa Major Films in 2004 has given birth
to his first movie project. "Gracie" is due in theaters in June of 2007.
“Dartmouth soccer is defined by the strength of the relationships and the
mutual desire of the players to never give up on the goal or each other. This
lesson of commitment has helped me negotiate life’s toughest terrain.”
Chase Field
The Dartmouth soccer teams
play on beautiful Chase Field,
one of the finest playing surfaces in the Northeast. Both
the game field and the practice field were recently renovated and contain an internal
auto-sprinkler system. With
dimensions of 113 x 73 yards,
there is ample space and room
to play a controlled style of
soccer. What sets Dartmouth
apart, though, is the crowds:
with seating for 2,000 spectators, Chase Field has been
known to house standing
room only crowds of thousands for NCAA tournament
games. Of particular note are
weekend doubleheaders, generally held on Saturdays during non-football weekends or
Sundays after home football
contests. The stands will be
packed for these matches by
the Upper Valley's soccerknowledgeable crowd.
Burnham Field
Dartmouth’s plan to build a new intercollegiate soccer facility for its nationally competitive men’s and women’s teams has
received a significant boost from Stanley Smoyer, Class of
1934. Smoyer has made a commitment
of $4.5 million to name the new facility
in honor of Alden “Whitey” Burnham, a
coach and administrator at Dartmouth
from 1960 to 1989, who led the Big
Green to its first Ivy League championship in soccer in 1964. Smoyer’s sons
were soccer standouts on Burnham’s
teams in the 1960s.
Located near Scully-Fahey Field on
the eastern edge of campus, the facility
will feature a top-quality natural-grass
pitch, permanent spectator seating, a
press box, field lighting, scoreboard,
and space for concessions and restrooms. The cost is projected at $8 million, which includes an endowment to
operate and maintain the facility.
“We’re grateful for Stan’s support
of the College, particularly its athletics
programs, which are an essential component of the Dartmouth experience,”
said President James Wright. “Stan’s
generous gift will provide an important resource for our students, and honor a coach and mentor who brought out the best
in his players.”
2006 Men’s Soccer Schedule
Day
Date
Opponent
Time
Fri.
Fri.
Sept. 1
Sept. 1
adidas/Hypertherm Dartmouth Classic (Hanover, N.H.)
Long Island Univ vs. New Hampshire
DARTMOUTH vs. BINGHAMTON
1:30 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
Sun.
Sun.
Sept. 3
Sept. 3
adidas/Hypertherm Dartmouth Classic (Hanover, N.H.)
Long Island vs. Binghamton
NEW HAMPSHIRE vs. DARTMOUTH
12:30 p.m.
3:00 p.m.
Fri.
Sept. 8
Yale Classic (New Haven, Conn.)
vs. Colgate
5:00 p.m.
Sun.
Sept. 10
Yale Classic (New Haven, Conn.)
vs. George Mason
12:00 p.m.
Fri.
Sept. 15
adidas Cal Legacy Classic (Berkeley, Calif.)
at California
2:30 p.m.
Sun.
Sept. 17
adidas Cal Legacy Classic (Berkeley, Calif.)
vs. Stanford
12:00 noon
Sat.
Tues.
Sat.
Wed.
Sun.
Sun.
Wed.
Sat.
Wed.
Sun.
Sat.
Sept. 23
Sept. 26
Sept. 30
Oct. 4
Oct. 8
Oct. 15
Oct. 18
Oct. 21
Oct. 25
Oct. 29
Nov. 4
BROWN*
at Fairfield
at Princeton*
SACRED HEART
YALE*
PENN*
BOSTON COLLEGE
at Columbia*
at Vermont
HARVARD*
at Cornell*
3:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
12:00 p.m.
3:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
HOME GAMES in CAPS and played on Chase Field, Hanover, N.H
All game times are local.
*=Ivy League match.
www.DartmouthSports.com