(July 28) Sue
Patberg has been named women’s soccer coach at Emory
University, effective August 1. Most recently, Patberg
has been the head coach of the U.S. Under-16 Women's National
Team. She served as head coach at the University of Georgia
from 1999-2004 and was named Big Ten Coach of the Year
twice while head coach at the University of Minnesota
from 1993-99.
"I am pleased to add Sue to the ranks of our outstanding
coaching staff at Emory," said Betsy Stephenson,
Director of Athletics. "Under her leadership, the
women’s soccer team at Georgia had one of the top
graduation rates and highest team GPAs annually among
UGA teams. Sue has played and coached at a high level
with the U.S. National team program, which are impressive
accomplishments. Sue brings with her a commitment to academic
and athletic excellence, which at the heart of Emory’s
athletic tradition."
During her tenure at UGA, the women’s soccer team
compiled an overall record of 49-45-9 and made two trips
to the NCAA Tournament, advancing twice to the second
round. While at the University of Minnesota, her teams
compiled a record of 97-42-9, appeared in five consecutive
NCAA Tournaments from 1995-99, and earned two Big Ten
Championships. She also coached at The Colorado College
from 1991-93 where she led her team to the Final Four
of the Division I NCAA Women’s Soccer Championship.
She was named as the 2004 Soccer Federation Developmental
Coach of the Year by the U.S. Olympic Committee and was
a member of the NCAA Women’s Soccer National Committee
from 1998-2002. About her new position, Patberg said "I
am extremely excited to be part of such a prestigious
academic institution and an athletic program that prides
itself on success. I look forward to working with a highly-motivated
group of young women and coaching an exciting style of
soccer."
Emory is a member of the University Athletic Association,
a conference of eight leading universities committed to
academic and athletic excellence. Members include Brandeis,
Carnegie Mellon, Case Western NYU, University of Chicago,
University of Rochester, and Washington University in
St. Louis.
The Emory women’s soccer program has made eight
NCAA Division III Championship appearances since 1993,
five times making it to the "Sweet 16." The
program has earned University Athletic Association conference
titles in 1994, 1998, 2000, and 2004. Student-athletes
from 13 states were members of the 2004 women’s
soccer team.
Patberg received a bachelor’s degree from the University
of Massachusetts in 1989 where she played collegiate soccer.
(Jan. 26) Emory University was one of seven teams in the
nation (NCAA I, II, III, NAIA) to receive the highest
award for sportsmanship from the National Soccer Coaches
Association of America. The Eagles were honored with the
NSCAA Gold Team Ethics Award. The Gold Team Ethics Award
goes to any men's or women's team that receives no yellow
or red cards all season.
Emory was the only one of the
seven schools to qualify for the NCAA national tournament
and one of two to post a winning record. All seven schools
that received the award were women's teams, six of which
were Division III.
(Dec. 10) Lauren Hudak has been
named to the all-region third team as selected by the
National Soccer Coaches Association. Previously, she made
the all-conference first team.
Hudak, a junior, missed all of
last season with a knee injury. This season, she finished
fourth on the team with five goals and three assists for
13 points. In three consecutive "must-win" conference
matches, Hudak scored either the game-winning or tying
goal.
Hudak is the 47th Eagle to be
honored on the all-region team since 1989. (The first
honoree was Bethe Segars, a first-team selection, in 1989).
(Dec. 7) Emory University has
been honored with a Team Academic Award from the National
Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA). The award
is presented to teams with cumulative grade point averages
of 3.0 or higher (on a 4.0 scale) for the past school
year.
Emory had a 3.51 average, 14th
highest in the nation among the 291 women's teams honored
in NCAA Divisions I, II and III, and NAIA and JUCO for
the 2003-04 school year.
Of the top 20 teams, based on
GPA, Emory was one of only three NCAA schools to qualify
for their respective 2004 national soccer championship
tournament.
Emory was one of nine NCAA Division
III schools to have both its men's and women's soccer
teams recognized for the third consecutive year. This
is the seventh consecutive year both Emory teams have
received the Team Academic Award.
(Nov. 15) Three Eagles and the
Emory coaching staff have earned University Athletic Association
honors.
Junior Lauren Hudak has been
named to the All-UAA first team, while juniors Jenna Kereiakes
and Nancy Wilson earned second team all-conference honors.
Head Coach Michael Sabatelle and Assistant Coach Laura
LeDuc were selected UAA Coaching Staff of the Year.
Senior Carrie Eckenhoff and sophomores
Laurel O'Neal and Adrienne DeMarais received honorable
mention.
This is the first all-UAA selection
for Hudak and the second for Kereiakes and Wilson, who
made the first and second teams, respectively, last season.
After missing all of last season
with an injury, Hudak scored five goals this season. Her
three goals in conference play led the team and tied for
third in the conference. Hudak's conference goals all
came in clutch situations for the Eagles, as they had
to win their last six conference games to win the UAA
Championship. Two of her conference goals were game-winners
and the third sent a game to overtime, where the Eagles
eventually won.
Kereiakes finished the season
first on the team in goals (7) and second in points (18).
She had two goals in conference games and scored the game
winner for Emory in the first round of the NCAA Division
III tournament.
Wilson scored two goals in conference
play, one of which being the game winner in the Eagles'
UAA championship clinching win. Wilson captained the Eagles
defense which proved vital as five of the Eagles' seven
conference games were decided by one goal, all five of
which were won by Emory.
This is Coach Sabatelle's fourth
Coach of the Year honor in his 17-year tenure at Emory.
He led Emory to its eighth NCAA tournament appearance
and fourth UAA championship.
This is Coach LeDuc's first UAA
Coaching Staff of the Year honor since joining the Emory
staff last season.
(Nov. 13) Emory University was
eliminated in the round of 32 in the NCAA Division III
national tournament, 1-0 in overtime to Lynchburg College
(Va.), ranked No. 10 in the nation.
Emory finishes the season with
a 13-7-0 record. After a 1-4 start, all against nationally
ranked teams, Emory won 12 of 14 games coming into today's
match.
After dropping its conference
opener, the Eagles won the remaining six conference games
to clinch the University Athletic Association title and
a berth in the NCAA tournament.
Defense keyed Emory's success
this season. In 11 games since that conference loss, the
Eagles recorded seven shutouts and a 0.44 goals against
average, the latter which would be the fourth lowest in
school history for an entire season.
Emory kept Lynchburg, which came
into the game averaging 2.68 goals per game, off the board
in regulation before the home team scored the winner eight
minutes into the first sudden-death overtime period.
Goalie Adrienne DeMarais made
seven saves today. In the last 11 games of the season,
she recorded a .905 save percentage with 53 total saves.
Her 4.82 saves per game, prorated for the entire season,
would be third highest in school history.
For the entire season, DeMarais
recorded a 0.55 goals against average, sixth best in Emory
history. Early in the season, she split time between goalie
and forward before taking over the starting goalie position
for good.
In a season in which it played
nine nationally ranked NCAA Division III or NAIA teams,
Emory was not charged with a single yellow or red card
by referees for dangerous or unsportsmanlike play.
This is the collegiate finale
for Emory seniors Carrie Eckenhoff, Megan Fox, Lauren
Lankford, and Lindsay Murphy.
(Nov. 10) Emory University took
the lead early en route to a 2-0 victory over Maryville
College (Tenn.) in the first round of the NCAA Division
III national tournament.
The Eagles advance to the second
round where they face the No. 10 ranked team in the nation,
Lynchburg College (Va.), this Saturday at 1 p.m. in Lynchburg.
Emory is aiming to advance to the "Sweet 16"
round for the sixth time in school history, all since
1993.
Jenna Kereiakes scored in the
seventh minute on an assist from Carrie Eckenhoff giving
the Eagles defense a lead which they would hold for the
whole game. Kereiakes leads the team with seven goals,
three of which are game winners, a total that also leads
the Eagles.
Jamie English added another goal
giving the Eagles a 2-0 lead. Her 55th-minute goal gives
her a team-leading 20 points this season, which ties for
10th most by a freshman in Emory history.
The Emory starting defense of
Lindsay Murphy, Laurel O'Neal, Megan Fox, and Nancy Wilson
played all 90 minutes for the Eagles allowing the opposition
only two shots on goal.
Adrienne DeMarais recorded her
seventh shutout in 10 games since becoming the starting
goalie. In that span, DeMarais has posted a 0.39 goals
against average with a 9-1 record.
This is the 15th time in 19 games
this season that the Eagles struck first and the 13th
time they have won after scoring the first goal. Emory
has a 9-1 record when leading at the half.
(Nov. 8) Emory University's first-round
game in the NCAA national tournament is this Wednesday
Nov. 10 at Maryville College (Tenn.). Game time is 1 p.m.
Emory has won the last three
meetings between these schools and leads the all-time
series 6-2-0.
This is the second NCAA tournament
appearance for the Emory seniors who were denied a berth
in 2001 when the Eagles were 17-1-1 and ranked No. 6 in
the nation by the coaches' association.
The winner of the game advances
to the second round at Lynchburg College (Va.) Saturday
Nov. 13 at 1 p.m.
(Nov. 7) Emory University capped
off a Cinderella ride, going from a 1-4 start this season
to a conference championship and a spot in the NCAA national
tournament. The Eagles completed the ascent today with
a 1-0 win at Carnegie Mellon (Pa.).
Nancy Wilson scored the lone
goal in the second half on a long-range shot and goalie
Adrienne DeMarais helped seal the shutout, her sixth in
nine games since she moved into the starting keeper position.
In those nine games, DeMarais has compiled a 0.44 goals
against average. Projected over an entire season, that
would be the fourth-lowest GAA in school history, behind
the record of 0.40, set by Andrea Pawliczek in 2000.
2000 is the last time Emory won
the conference title. The Eagles also did so in 1998 and
1994.
Emory shares the title with Washington
University (Mo.). By virtue of the conference tie-breaker
procedure, Emory gets the nod for the University Athletic
Association's automatic berth in the NCAA tournament.
The first tie breaker is head-to-head result which favored
Emory because of its 1-0 win at Washington this season.
With a 12-6-0 season record,
this is the most losses Emory has carried into the national
tournament since 1997 when it had seven losses in the
regular season. This is the 16th consecutive year the
team has won 10 or more games.
The Eagles started 1-4 this season
with all five games against a team ranked in the top 25
nationally in NCAA Division III or NAIA. Emory ended up
winning three games this season against nationally ranked
teams, a feat last achieved in 1998.
Emory dropped its conference
opener to a team then ranked No. 15 in the nation. With
no room for error, the Eagles responded by winning the
remaining six conference games, five by one goal and four
on the road.
Emory was ranked ninth in its
region by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America
at the start of this week.
(Nov. 4) Two Emory University
players have been selected to the CoSIDA Academic All-District
team for soccer. Lauren Hudak made the all-district first
team while Carrie Eckenhoff made the second team.
Hudak's name will be placed on
the national ballot for the Academic All-America team
to be announced next month. The junior had 3.94 cumulative
grade-point average (on a 4.0 scale) as a biology major.
This season, Hudak has 12 points
with five goals and two assists. She has scored two game-winning
goals and one game-tying goal, all coming in conference
play. Hudak was the conference Athlete of the Week Nov.
1.
Eckenhoff, a midfielder, is a
psychology major with a 3.64 GPA. She is a three-time
conference All-Academic Recognition honoree.
Eckenhoff, a team captain, is
tied for first on the team in goals, second in points,
and third in assists. For her career, she is tied for
10th place at Emory in points, 11th in assists, and 12th
in goals.
Voting for the Academic All-District
team is conducted by the College Sports Information Directors
of America. Emory nominees represent the "college
division" in District 3 which is composed of NCAA
Division II and III, and NAIA schools in the states of
Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia.
(Oct. 31) Emory University remained
in the hunt for the conference championship with a 2-1
win at New York University on a goal with five seconds
left in regulation.
Lauren Hudak scored the winner
just before the final horn on an assist from Amy Bedford.
Hudak has five goals and 12 points this season, both surpassing
her freshman totals.
Nancy Wilson, assisted by Carrie
Eckenhoff, tallied first for Emory. Eckenhoff moves into
a tie for 11th place on the school's all-time list for
career assists, one assist shy of the top 10.
With a 5-1-0 record in the University
Athletic Association, the Eagles have a chance to win
the conference and its automatic berth for the NCAA national
tournament. To do so, second-place Emory needs to win
its last game, next Sunday at Carnegie Mellon (Pa.), after
first-place Chicago ties or loses next Saturday.
Emory has finished in the top
three of the conference 16 times in the UAA's 17-year
history. Emory has won the UAA title three times (1994,
1998, 2000), and been runner-up six times.
(Oct. 29) Katie O'Brien scored
a "Golden Goal" in the second overtime to help
Emory University to a 3-2 win at Brandeis (Mass.).
This is the seventh "Golden
Goal" in school history, the first in a conference
game since Annie Schenck on Sept. 28, 2002, also at Brandeis.
Lauren Hudak tied the game for
Emory with a goal at the 82-minute mark. Jenna Kereiakes
had the other goal for Emory.
Emory now has five players with
10 or more points this season, two more than last season,
three shy of the school record.
The Eagles have won nine of their
last 11 games. With its 10th win of the season, Emory
has reached double figures in wins for the 16th consecutive
year.
(Oct. 23) Emory University, ranked
10th in the region, lost 1-0 at the University of the
South (Tenn.), ranked eighth in the region. The lone goal
was scored with less than 25 minutes left in regulation.
This is the first time Emory
has ever lost to University of the South. The Eagles lead
the all-time series 15-1-1. (The tie was in 1988).
Emory remains in second place
in the University Athletic Association with three conference
games remaining.
(Oct. 20) Emory University won
for the eighth time in nine games with a 7-0 blanking
of Wesleyan College (Ga.). The shutout is the team's fifth
consecutive, all with Adrienne DeMarais in goal.
The seven goals is a season high
for Emory (9-5-1), surpassing the previous high of six
goals versus Piedmont Sept. 21.
Goal scorers for Emory were Jamie
English with a pair, Jenna Kereiakes, Lauren Hudak, Nancy
Wilson, Gail Bush and Natalie Balkema.
(Oct. 17) Lauren Hudak scored
the game-winning goal for Emory University (8-5) in a
1-0 victory over the University of Rochester (NY), ranked
23rd in the nation. The Eagles improved to 3-1 in the
University Athletic Association with the win and are now
in second place.
Adrienne DeMarais earned her
fourth straight shutout. In nearly 500 minutes of play,
DeMarais has a goals against average of 0.37.
Hudak's goal came off a Jenna
Kereiakes corner kick in the 87th minute of the game.
Jamie English earned her team-leading sixth assist of
the season.
The Eagles have won seven of
their last eight games. They have defeated three nationally
ranked teams this season, a feat last achieved by the
1998 team.
The Eagles also celebrated Senior
Day, honoring Lauren Lankford, Lindsay Murphy, Carrie
Eckenhoff and Megan Fox.
(Oct. 15) Adrienne DeMarais earned
her third straight shutout, as Emory University (7-5)
defeated Case Western Reserve University (OH) by a score
of 3-0. DeMarais has allowed two goals in six games as
a goalie.
Offensively, Beth Wilson and Amy Bedford scored their
first goals of the season for the Eagles.
Jenna Kereiakes added her fourth goal of the season late
in the game, assisted by Jamie English. With 59 career
points, Kereiakes ranks ninth in school history. English
earned her team-leading fifth assist of the season.
(Oct. 10) Kinda Secret's first-half
goal held up in a 1-0 win for Emory University against
the No. 11 ranked team in the nation, Washington University
(Mo.).
This marks the sixth time in
the last seven years that Emory has beaten at least two
national top-25 teams in the same season. Earlier this
season, the Eagles beat No. 17 Mary Washington (Va.).
Secret scored her third goal
of the season on a header off a corner kick by Gail Bush
at the 37-minute mark.
Emory goalie Adrienne DeMarais recorded her second consecutive
shutout with a season-high six saves.
Emory is the first visiting team
to win at Washington since Nov. 2, 2002.
(Oct. 4) For the third time in
five games Emory University won by a four-goal margin,
as the Eagles beat Oglethorpe University (Ga.). Captain
Carrie Eckenhoff scored two goals leading Emory to a 4-0
win.
Eckenhoff opened and capped the
scoring for the Eagles with goals in the 15th and 81st
minutes. Both goals were assisted by freshman Jamie English.
English and Jenna Kereiakes each added a goal, leaving
them tied for second most for Emory this season with three.
Eckenhoff leads the Eagles with
13 points, while English's four-point game moves her into
second on the team with 10 points for the year.
Eckenhoff moved into 11th place
in Emory history with 55 points in her career and is tied
for 12th in career goals with 19. Kereiakes is tied for
ninth all-time with 57 points as an Eagle.
In the goal for Emory, Adrienne
DeMarais had one save and earned the first win and shutout
of her career.
This was the third time this
year the Eagles' defense held an opponent scoreless.
(Oct. 2) Emory University's (4-5)
Carrie Eckenhoff scored her team-leading fourth goal of
the season in a 3-1 loss to the University of Chicago
(7-1-1). The game, held over Homecoming Week, was the
first conference match of the season for the Eagles and
their first loss at home.
Eckenhoff scored Emory's lone
goal after intercepting a Chicago pass. The senior captain
has scored her four goals over 11 shots, giving her a
shooting percentage of .364. Eckenhoff now leads the team
in points and goals. She is 11th in school history in
points and 13th in goals.
(Sept. 24) Jamie English scored
two goals, leading Emory University (4-4) to a 3-2 victory
against University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. Katie O'Brien
had two assists. The Eagles are now 3-0 at home this season.
Jenna Kereiakes scored the game-winner
in the 79th minute of the game off a free kick from Laurel
O'Neal and a header from Katie O'Brien.
Jamie English's goals were the
first two of her Emory career. The freshman now has two
goals and two assists on the season and is tied with Kereiakes
for second on the team in points (6).
O'Brien's two assists put her
atop the team's leader board in assists (3) and points
(7).
Kereiakes' 23 career goals and
56 career points rank seventh and ninth in school history,
respectively.
(Sept. 21) Senior Carrie Eckenhoff
and junior Jenna Kereiakes each tallied four points as
Emory University beat Piedmont College (Ga.) 6-2. Eckenhoff
had two goals and Kereiakes had a goal and two assists
as the Eagles improved to 2-0 at the WoodPEC this season.
Emory fired 36 shots and found
the net six times in the game, a total that ties for fifth
place in school history. In addition to the two four-point
performances, Lauren Hudak and Lindsay Murphy each had
a goal and an assist, and Kinda Secret added another goal.
Eckenhoff's two goals move her
into the team lead for goals (3) and points (7) this season.
She has 16 goals and 49 points for her career, totals
which both tie for 15th in school history.
Kereiakes' performance earned
her her first points of the 2004 campaign. Her goal, the
22nd of her career, moved her into seventh on the Emory
career leader board. With a total of 53 career points,
Kereiakes now ranks 11th in school history and will break
into the top 10 with her next point.
Emory is 40-11-1 all-time against
schools from Georgia.
(Sept. 18) Kristine Falk had
a goal and an assist as Emory University (2-4) defeated
Rhodes College (TN) by a score of 4-0 in its home opener.
Goalie Amy Bedford earned the first shutout and win of
her career.
The Eagle offense kept up the
pressure with 13 shots on goal throughout the game. In
addition to Falk's score and an own goal by Rhodes, Kinda
Secret scored her first collegiate goal.
Carrie Eckenhoff scored the Eagles'
fourth and final goal with only three minutes left in
the game. Eckenhoff's 45 career points ranks 15th in school
history.
This is the 16th consecutive
year Emory has won its home opener. The Eagles are now
17-1-1 all-time in home openers with the loss coming in
its first season of varsity play and the tie in the third
season.
Since 1989, the fourth season
of varsity play, Emory is 114-23-10 all-time at home,
an .809 winning percentage. Since 2000, the Eagles are
34-3-3 (.888) at home.
(Sept. 12) It was a tough weekend
for Emory University which dropped a pair of contests
to national top-25 teams. The Eagles lost by identical
3-0 scores to College of New Jersey, ranked 10th in the
nation, and Wheaton (Ill.), ranked 22nd in the nation.
This concludes a five-game stretch
in which all of Emory's opponents were nationally ranked
in the top 25 in either NCAA Division III or the NAIA.
The Eagles' first game against a non-ranked team is their
home opener this Wednesday against Huntingdon (Ala.).
(Sept. 5) Emory University missed
a second consecutive upset of a national top-20 team,
losing 3-2 at Virginia Wesleyan College, ranked 15th nationally.
Emory led 1-0 at halftime before the home team scored
three unanswered goals.
Junior midfielder Katie O'Brien scored both goals for
Emory, her first in Emory uniform. O'Brien scored
in the first half on a header off a corner kick
by sophomore Jessie Dean. O'Brien scored again in
the final minute of the contest on a long-distance
shot.
Last fall, Virginia Wesleyan
advanced to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Division
III national tournament.
Jessie Dean, Laurel O'Neal,
and Katie O'Brien were named to the all-tournament
team.
(Sept. 4) Emory University
beat the No. 17 ranked team in the nation, University
of Mary Washington (Va.), 1-0, to give Coach Michael
Sabatelle his 200th career win at Emory. The contest
was at a neutral site as part of the Virginia Wesleyan
Classic.
Senior Lindsay Murphy scored
the first goal of her career early in the second
half on an assist from senior Carrie Eckenhoff.
That is the 17th career assist for Eckenhoff who
moves into a tie for 13th place on the school's
all-time list for career assists. She needs three
more assists to crack the top 10 on that list.
Sophomore Adrienne DeMarais
and junior Nancy Wilson shared the shutout, each
playing a half. The former made three saves and
the latter five saves.
The last time Emory beat
a top 20 team was Oct. 5, 2002, a 1-0 win at home
against University of Rochester (N.Y.), also ranked
17th in nation. Its last win against a top-20 team
on the road or at a neutral site was Oct. 5, 2001,
a 3-1 win at the University of Chicago, then 18th
in the nation.
Sabatelle's career record
stands at 200-79-32 in his 17th year at Emory. He
became the Eagles' head coach at the start of the
1988 season.He is the 15th women's soccer coach
in NCAA Division III history and the 37th in any
NCAA division to reach the 200-win plateau.
(Sept. 1) Emory University
dropped its season opener, 4-0, to Berry University
(Ga.), ranked 22nd in the nation among NAIA schools.
Emory's all-time record in season openers now stands
at 14-3-2.
(August 24) Emory University
has been picked to finish third in the University
Athletic Association, according to the pre-season
poll of conference coaches.
The Eagles are coming a 14-5-0
season in which they finished fourth in the UAA with a
4-3-0 record.
Emory received 31 points in the coaches' poll, finishing
behind Chicago, the NCAA national runner-up last season,
which garnered all the first-place votes for 49 points,
and Washington (Mo.), which received 43 points.
The rest of the predicted finish
is Rochester (28 points), Carnegie Mellon (27), Brandeis
(26), New York (12) and Case Western Reserve (8).
In the conference's 17-year history,
Emory has won three titles and been the runner-up six
times.