CS360 Blog Archive November 2009

Third Installment of CS360's Exclusive NCAA Notebook (11/29/09)

CHECK OUT CS360's third installment (Nov. 29) of its exclusive NCAA Notebook #3  – containing a wide variety of historical links and interesting data relative to the 2009 NCAAs (accessed via the link above or the Postseason Portal tab).

Hometown Heroes (home-state analysis of players from quarterfinalist teams)

HOMETOWN HEROES – Click on link (or access via Postseason  Portal tab) for CS360's exclusive home-state breakdown and lists of players from the 2009 NCAA quarterfinalist teams.

Six "Dynamic Duos" to be Showcased in NCAA Quarterfinals

Dynamic Duos update ... teams with multiple double-digit goalscorers (also list of players with double-digit goals & assists) ... click on above link or access via "Top Players" tab, in order to view the complete Dynamic Duos tribute page (includes more details, beyond what is included below ... )


By Pete LaFleur (editor@collegesoccer360.com)


Heading into the 2009 NCAA quarterfinals (as of Nov. 26), there still are only 12 Division I women's soccer teams that have multiple double-digit goalscorers, with Portland being the only program that currently boasts three or more players (4) who have 10-plus goals. Nine of the teams with multiple double-digit goalscorers qualified for the NCAAs, including six of the eight quarterfinalists that will play over the next couple of days: Stanford, UCLA, Portland, Florida State, Wake Forest and Notre Dame (plus three teams that have been eliminated form the NCAAs – Penn State, Arkansas-Pine Bluff and LSU – along with NCAA non-qualifiers Charlotte, Central Connecticut and Middle Tennessee). 


The 26 players referenced on this page include 12 (eight of them from quarterfinalist teams) who individually have totaled double-digit goals and assists this season: 

• Stanford's Kelley O'Hara (23G-13A) and Christen Press (19G-13A)
• Portland's Danielle Foxhoven (24G-12A), Michelle Enyeart (13G-12A) and Sophie Schmidt (12G-12A) ... note that Enyeart is out with season-ending injury
• Florida State's Jessica Price (16G-10A)
• UCLA's Lauren Cheney (16G-10A)
• Wake Forest's Kaley Fountain (10G-10A)
• LSU's Malorie Rutledge (13G-12A)
• Arkansas Pine Bluff's Jade West (11G-10A)
• Charlotte's Hailey Beam (10G-10A)
• and Central Connecticut's Leah Blaney (11G-13A)

The only other player in the country (13 total) with 10-plus goals and 10-plus assists this season is Canisius senior Sylvia Kowalski (14G-10A). ... Note that CS360 is in the process of constructing a separate page for these "double-double" players.


All "Dynamic Duos" and "Double-Doubles" research comes courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com. If reprinting or referencing this data, please credit accordingly. Photos are courtesy of each school's sports information/media relations/athletic communications offices and their photography staffs.

Research courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com

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    Stanford's O'Hara & Press                  UCLA's Leroux & Cheney                             

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7A4D502E-E25C-45BA-BE13-3CBE4A8E5E07




                
            Portland
's Foxhaven, Enyeart, Schmidt & Kreminski

STANFORD  (42 GOALS ... 23 + 19)
Kelley O'Hara (Sr.) ... 23G-13A (59 pts) ... 8 GWG/5 GWA (21 GW pts) ... 23 GS
Christen Press (Jr.) ... 19G-13A (51 pts) ... 6 GWG/6 GWA (18 GW pts) ... 23 GS
Combined – 42G-26A (110 pts) ... 14 GWG/11 GWA (39 GW pts) ... 46 GS

UCLA  (39 GOALS ...23 + 16)
Sydney Leroux (So.) ... 23G-2A (48 pts) ... 7 GWG/1 GWA (15 GW pts) ... 22 GS
Lauren Cheney (Sr.)...16G-10A (42 pts)...4 GWG/3 GWA (11 GW pts)...21 GP/20 GS
Combined – 39G-12A (90 pts) ... 11 GWG-4 GWA (26 GW pts) ... 43 GP/42 GS 

PORTLAND  (37 GOALS ... 24 + 13)
Danielle Foxhoven (So.)... 24G-12A (60 pts)...6 GWG/5 GWA (17 GW pts)...21 GS
Sophie Schmidt (Jr.) ... 
12G-12A (36 pts) ... 4 GWG/3 GWA (11 GW pts) ... 21 GS
Combined – 36G-24A (96 pts) ... 10 GWG/8 GWA (28 GW pts) ... 42 GS
Michelle Enyeart (Sr.) out for yr./injury: 13G-12A (38 pts), 4 GWG-6 GWA (14 GW pts), 18 GS
...   Halley Kreminski (So.) has 10G-2A (22 pts), 1 GWG (2 GW pts), 21 GP/1 GS           

FLORIDA STATE  (33 GOALS ... 17 + 16)
Tiffany McCarty (So.) ...17G-7A (41 pts) ... 3 GWG/3 GWA (9 GW pts) ... 24 GS
Jessica Price (Jr./So.) ... 16G-10A (42 pts) ... 8 GWG/1 GWA (17 GW pts) ... 24 GS
Combined – 33G-17A (83 pts) ... 11 GWG/4 GWA (26 GW pts) ... 48 GS

NOTRE DAME  (27 GOALS ... 17 + 10)
Melissa Henderson (So.)...17G-5A (39 pts)...8 GWG/1 GWA (17 GWpts)...22 GP/19 GS
Lauren Fowlkes (Jr.) ... 10G-4A (24 pts) ... 3 GWG (6 GW pts) ... 24 GP/22 GS
Combined – 27G-9A (63 pts) ... 11 GWG/1 GWA (19 GW pts) ... 46 GP GP/41 GS

WAKE FOREST  (24 GOALS ... 14 + 10)
Jill Hutchinson (Sr.)...14G-4A (32 pts)...4 GWG/2 GWA (10 GW pts)...20 GP/16 GS
Kaley Fountain (Sr.) ... 10G-10A (30 pts) ... 3 GWG/5 GWA (11 GW pts) ... 22 GS 
Combined – 24G-14A (62 pts) ... 7 GWG-7 GWA (21 GW pts) ... 42 GP/38 GS

  Florida State's McCarty & Price

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Notre Dame's
Henderson
& Fowlkes


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Wake Forest's
Hutchinson & Fountain




Teams eliminated from the 2009 NCAAs (prior to quarterfinals):

PENN STATE  (27 GOALS ... 14 + 13)
Danielle Toney (Jr.) ... 14G-9A (37 pts) ... 5 GWG/1 GWA (11 GW pts) ... 21 GS
Katie Schoepfer (Sr.) ... 13G-6A (32 pts) ... 4 GWG/1 GWA (9 GW pts) ... 21 GS 

Combined – 27G-15A (69 pts) ... 9 GWG-2 GWA (20 GW pts) ... 42 GS

ARKANSAS-PINE BLUFF  (22 GOALS ... 11 + 11)
Jade West (So.) ... 11G-10A (32 pts) ... 4 GWG-1 GWA (9 GW pts)...23 GP/22 GS
Nicole Parks-Powell (So.) ... 11G-4A (26 pts) ... 2 GWG (4 GW pts) ... 23 GP/21 GS
Combined – 22G-14A (58 pts) ... 6 GWG-1 GWA (13 GW pts) ... 46 GP GP/43 GS

LSU  (25 GOALS ... 13 + 12)
Malorie Rutledge (Sr.) ... 13G-12A (38 pts) ... 6 GWG/5 GWA (17 GW pts) ... 24 GS
Melissa Clarke (Sr.) ... 12G-5A (29 pts)...4 GWG/1 GWA (9 GW pts)...23 GP/21 GS
Combined – 25G-17A (67 pts) ... 10 GWG-6 GWA (26 GW pts) ... 47 GP GP/45 GS


Teams not in the 2009 NCAAs:

CHARLOTTE  (23 GOALS ... 13 + 10)
Whitney Weinraub (Jr.) ... 13G-6A (32 pts) ... 6 GWG/3 GWA (15 GW pts) ... 21 GS
Hailey Beam (Sr.) ... 10G-10A (30 pts) ... 3 GWG/4 GWA (10 GW pts) ... 21 GS
Combined – 23G-16A (62 pts) ... 9 GWG/7 GWA (25 GW pts) ... 42 GS

CENTRAL CONNECTICUT  (22 GOALS ... 11 + 11)
Leah Blaney (Sr.) ... 11G-13A (35 pts)...4 GWG-3 GWA (11 GW pts)...20 GP/19 GS
Beth Lloyd (Jr.) ... 11G-5A (27 pts) ... 4 GWG-1 GWA (9 GW pts) ... 21 GP/19 GS
Combined – 22G-18A (62 pts) ... 8 GWG-4 GWA (20 GW pts) ... 41 GP GP/38 GS

MIDDLE TENNESSEE  (21 GOALS ... 11 + 10)
Shan Jones (So.) ... 11G-3A (25 pts) ... 4 GWG (8 GW pts) ... 20 GP/18 GS
Vanessa Mueggler (Jr.)..10G-4A (24 pts)..2 GWG-1 GWA (5 GW pts)..20 GP/19 GS
Combined – 21G-7A (49 pts) ... 6 GWG-1 GWA (13 GW pts) ... 40 GP GP/37 GS

 Charlotte's Weinraub & Beam

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STANFORD (O'Hara & Press)

C803A5E1-194F-4683-A43C-D285142BDACE

Kelley O'Hara ... 23 goals

Senior ... Forward ... 5-5 ... #19

Fayetteville, Georgia
(Peachtree City Lazers ... Starr's Mill HS)

2009: 23 goals, 13 assists (59 points) ... 23 GS
... 8 gamewinning goals, 5 GWA (21 GW points)

Career: 54G-32A (140 points) ... 84 GP/78 GS
... 20 gamewinning goals


Research courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com


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Christen Press ... 19 goals

Junior ... Forward ... 5-7 ... #23

Palos Verdes Estates, California
(Slammers FC ... Chadwick HS)

2009: 19 goals, 13 assists (51 points) ... 23 GS
... 6 gamewinning goals, 6 GWA (18 GW pts)

Career: 43G-30A (115 points) ... 70 GP/66 GS
... 13 gamewinning goals


* O'Hara and Press both are among 13 players in the nation with double-digit goals and assists

O'Hara/Press Combined: 42G-26A (110 pts)..14 GWG/11 GWA (36 GWpts)..46 GS
Combined Career: 97G-62A (255 pts) ... 33 GWG ... 154 GP/144 GS



UCLA (Leroux & Cheney)

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Sydney Leroux ... 23 goals

Sophomore ... Forward ... 5-7 ... #2

Vancouver, British Columbia
(Vancouver Whitecaps ... Johnston Heights HS)

2009: 23 goals, 2 assists (48 points) ... 22 GS
... 7 gamewinning goals, 1 GWA (15 GW points)

Career: 28G-8A (64 points) ... 41 GP/37 GS
... 9 gamewinning goals


Research courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com

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Lauren Cheney ... 16 goals

Junior ... Forward ... 5-7 ... #23

Indianapolis, Indiana
(Carmel United Heat ... Ben Davis HS)

2009: 16 goals, 10 assists (42 points) ... 21 GP/20 GS
... 4 gamewinning goals, 3 GWA (11 GW pts)

Career: 69G-31A (169 points) ... 87 GP/84 GS
... 27 gamewinning goals

* One of 13 players in the nation with double-digit goals and assists in 2009

Leroux/Cheney Comb.: 39G-12A (90pts)..11 GWG/4 GWA (26 GWpts)..43 GP/42 GS
Combined Career: 97G-39A (233 pts) ... 36 GWG ... 128 GP/121 GS



PORTLAND (Foxhoven & Schmidt)

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Danielle Foxhoven ... 24 goals

Sophomore ... Forward ... 5-6 ... #9

Littleton, Colorado
(Colorado Rush/Rush Nike ... Mullen HS)

2009: 24 goals, 12 assists (60 points)
... 6 GWG/5 GWA (17 GW pts) ... 21 GS 

Career: 40G-18A (98 points) ... 43 GS
... 10 gamewinning goals


Research courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com


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Sophie Schmidt ... 12 goals

Junior ... Forward
5-7 ... #13

Abbotsford, British Columbia
(Vancouver Whitecaps ... Mouat HS)

2009: 12 goals, 12 assists
(36 points) ... 21 GS
... 4 GWG/3 GWA (11 GW pts)

Career: 33G-26A (92 pts) ... 56 GP/50 GS ... 9 GWGs


* Foxhoven and Schmidt both are among 13 players in the nation with double-digit goals and assists


Foxhoven/Schmidtt Comb.: 36G-24A (96 pts)...10 GWG/8 GWA (28 GWpts)...42 GS
Combined Career: 73G-44A (190 pts) ... 19 GWG ... 99 GP/93 GS


FLORIDA STATE (McCarty & Price)

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Tiffany McCarty ... 17 goals

Sophomore ... Forward ... 5-4 ... #14

Laurel, Maryland
(Freestate Shooters ... St. John's College HS)


2009: 17 goals, 7 assists (41 points) ... 24 GS
... 3 gamewinning goals, 3 GWA (9 GW points)

Career: 28G-13A (69 points) ... 47 GP/44 GS
5 gamewinning goals


Research courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com


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Jessica Price ... 16 goals

Junior (RS-So.) ... Forward ... 5-5 ... #6

Libertyville, Illinois
(Eclipse Select ... Vernon Hills HS)

2009: 16 goals, 10 assists (42 points) ... 24 GS
... 8 gamewinning goals, 1 GWA (17 GW points)

Career: 19G-16A (54 points) ... 46 GP/30 GS
... 9 gamewinning goals


* One of 13 players in the nation with double-digit goals and assists

McCarty/Price Comb.: 28G-16A (72 pts) ... 8 GWG/3 GWA (19 GW pts) ... 42 GS
Combined Career: 42G-28A (112 pts) ... 11 GWG ... 87 GP/68 GS



NOTRE DAME (Henderson & Fowlkes)

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Melissa Henderson ... 17 goals

Sophomore ... Forward
5-8 ... #6

Garland, Texas
(Dallas Texans ... Berkner HS/Richardson, TX)


2009: 17 goals, 5 assists (39 points) ... 22 GP/19 GS
... 3 gamewinning goals, 3 GWA (9 GW points)

Career: 34G-7A (75 points) ... 49 GP/39 GS
10 gamewinning goals


Research courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com

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Lauren Fowlkes ... 10 goals

Junior (2 yrs. elig. left after '09)
Forward/Defender  5-10 ... #9

Lee's Summit, Missouri
(Kansas City, KS, Dynamos ... St. Theresa's Academy)

2009: 10 goals, 4 assists (24 points) ... 24 GP/22 GS
... 3 gamewinning goals (6 GW points)

Career: 13G-5A (31 points) ... 68 GP/54 GS ...
4 gamewinning goals


Henderson/Fowlkes Comb.: 27G-9A (63pts)..11 GWG/1 GWA (19 GWpts)..46 GP/41 GS
Combined Career: 47G-12A (106 pts) ... 14 GWG ... 117 GP/93 GS



WAKE FOREST (Hutchinson & Fountain)

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Jill Hutchinson 
... 14 goals

Senior ... Forward ... 5-4 ... #4

Wayne, Pennsylvania
(West Chester United Predators ... Conestoga HS)


2009: 14 goals, 4 assists (32 points) ... 20 GP/16 GS
... 4 gamewinning goals, 
2 GWA (10 GW points)

Career: 36G-13A (85 points) ... 83 GP/51 GS
15 gamewinning goals


Research courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com


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Kaley Fountain 
... 10 goals

Senior ... Forward ... 5-7 ... #6

Austin, Texas
(Lonsestar ... Westwood HS)

2009: 10 goals, 10 assists (30 points) ... 22 GS
... 3 gamewinning goals/
5 gamewinning assists 
(11 GW points)

Career: 13G-5A (31 points) ... 68 GP/54 GS
... 4 gamewinning goals


* one of 13 players in the nation currently with double-digit goals and assists




Hutchinson/Fountain Comb.: 24G-14A (62pts)..7 GWG/7 GWA (21 GWpts)..42 GP/38 GS
Combined Career: 47G-12A (106 pts) ... 14 GWG ... 117 GP/93 GS

Updated NCAA Notebook (#2; Nov. 24)

CLICK HERE for College Soccer 360's exclusive and updated NCAA Notebook (#2; Nov. 24, 2009) – includes a variety of historical lists and notes that are relative to the 2009 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Championship.

Senior Salute (updated thru NCAA round-of-16)

This update includes the NCAA Tournament round-of-16 games played on Nov. 20-21, involving 15 of the teams on this list. The North Carolina senior class reached 90 career wins (91-9-4) following Saturday's 1-0 win over Maryland, while the Notre Dame seniors (90-10-4) remain one win behind the Tar Heels. 


This marks the 19th time in 28 Division I women's soccer seasons that a senior class has totaled more than 90 career wins (now done by 16 UNC classes and three from ND). The current Tar Heel seniors are tied for 17th on that list and could move into a tie for 13th by beating Wake Forest in the upcoming quarterfinals. If North Carolina were to close the season with three more wins (and win the NCAA title), its resulting 94 total wins over the past four seasons would tie for ninth place on the all-time senior class victory list.


The three top Notre Dame entires on the four-year wins list include the Irish class of 2006 (92-8-3, from '03-'06), the class of 2008 (92-10-3) and the class of 1997 (91-6-4).


Here's a bonus look at the programs with the most total games played over the past four seasons: North Carolina (104 games), Notre Dame (104), Florida State (100), Florida (98), UCLA (97), Texas A&M (97), Penn State (95), Stanford (94), Denver (93), Oklahoma State (93), Texas (92), West Virginia (92), South Carolina (92), BYU (91), Purdue (91), USC (90), Portland (90) and Wake Forest (90).


The teams listed below include seven of the eight still alive in the 2009 NCAAs: the top six teams on the list – UNC, ND, UCLA, Portland, Stanford and FSU – plus Wake Forest (tied for 18th).

 

Here's the complete updated list of the nation's winningest senior classes (note: when referencing this list, please credit CollegeSoccer360.com with the research and – if possible – provide a link to this blog post ... click on post headline for direct URL). 


Current Four-Year Records in D-I Women's Soccer (top senior classes; '06-'09)
(research compiled by CollegeSoccer360.com; yearly records are 2006...'07...'08...'09)

(1) ... 91-9-4  (.894) ... North Carolina  (27-1-0...19-4-1 ... 25-1-2 ... 20-3-1)
(2) ... 90-10-4  (.885) ... Notre Dame  (25-1-1 ... 19-5-2 ... 26-1-0 ... 20-3-1)
(3) ... 83-9-5  (.881) ... UCLA  (21-4-0 ... 20-2-2 ... 22-1-2 ... 20-2-1)


(4) ... 76-11-3  (.861) ... Portland  (17-4-3 ... 18-4-0 ... 20-2-0 ... 21-1-0)
(5) ... 75-11-8  (.840) ... Stanford  (15-6-2 ... 15-3-5 ... 22-2-1 ... 23-0-0)
(6) ... 72-17-11  (.775) ... Florida State  (18-4-4 ... 18-6-3 ... 17-3-3 ... 19-4-1)


(7) ... 68-22-7  (.737) ... Texas A&M  (17-6-1 ... 18-4-2 ... 18-5-1 ... 15-7-3)
(8) ... 67-17-9  (.769) ... Denver  (19-3-1 ... 12-5-5 ... 19-3-2 ... 17-6-1)
(9) ... 66-17-8  (.769) ... BYU  (13-3-4 ... 17-4-2 ... 18-6-0 ... 18-4-2)
....... 66-21-11  (.730) ... Florida  (14-6-5 ... 17-5-3 ... 19-4-1 ... 16-6-2)

(11) ... 65-23-7  (.721) ... Penn State  (18-5-3 ... 18-4-2 ... 16-8-0 ... 13-6-2)
(12) ... 64-16-10  (.767) ... Navy  (21-2-1 ... 14-5-4 ... 15-4-3 ... 14-5-2)
......... 64-17-12  (.753) ... Oklahoma State  (17-3-3 ... 14-6-3 ... 18-1-4 ... 15-7-2)
(14) ... 63-17-6  (.767) ... Charlotte  (13-5-2 ... 16-5-1 ... 18-4-1 ... 16-3-2)

(15) ... 59-17-11  (.741) ... Milwaukee  (16-4-2 ... 13-4-4 ... 18-3-2 ... 12-6-3)
......... 59-19-12  (.722) ... USC  (11-5-5 ... 20-3-2 ... 16-5-2 ... 12-6-3)
......... 59-22-6  (.713) ... Memphis   (11-6-3 ... 17-4-1 ... 15-5-2 ... 16-7-0)

(18) ... 58-20-7  (.724) ... William & Mary  (16-1-4 ... 15-5-2 ... 15-7-1 ... 12-7-0)
......... 58-21-12  (.703) ... Purdue  (14-6-3 ... 20-2-3 ... 12-7-3 ... 12-6-3)
......... 58-24-6  (.693) ... UNC Greensboro  (13-8-2 ... 16-5-1 ... 16-4-3 ... 13-7-0)
......... 58-26-6  (.678) ... Wake Forest  (16-6-1 ... 13-7-3 ... 13-8-0 ... 16-5-2)

(22) ... 57-21-10 (.705) ... Central Florida  (11-6-2 ... 15-4-4 ... 14-6-3 ... 17-5-1)
......... 57-24-5  (.692) ... North Texas  (15-5-2 ... 15-8-0 ... 15-4-1 ... 12-7-2)

(24) .. 56-19-17  (.701) ... West Virginia  (14-4-3 ... 18-5-2 ... 14-3-6 ... 10-7-6)
........ 56-21-10  (.701) ... Boston College  (12-7-3 ... 11-5-4 ... 15-6-2 ... 18-3-1)
........ 56-21-15  (.690) ... Texas  (18-4-3 ... 16-4-5 ... 13-4-4 ... 9-9-3)

(27) ... 55-18-8  (.728) ... Monmouth  (14-4-2 ... 12-5-4 ... 14-4-1 ... 15-5-1)
......... 55-23-14  (.674) .... South Carolina  (11-6-5 ... 14-6-3 ... 11-7-4 ... 19-4-2)

(29) ... 54-17-9  (.731) ... Western Kentucky  (11-8-0 ... 14-3-3 ... 15-2-4 ... 14-4-2)
......... 54-26-4  (.666) ... UTEP  (15-6-0 ... 13-7-2 ... 13-7-1 ... 13-6-1)
......... 54-30-4  (.636) ... Georgia  (10-9-0 ... 18-4-2 ... 11-11-1 ... 15-6-1)

(32) ... 53-24-9  (.669) ... Boston Univ.  (13-5-3 ... 11-7-3 ... 15-6-1 ... 14-6-2)

(all records above include games played through Nov. 21, 2009)

Maryland Looking to Make History ... 

note: all research below is courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com

TERP TIME? – Maryland today will be attempting to upset North Carolina and earn the following rare distinctions:

• The Terps would become only the 20th different team ever to beat UNC, in 28 NCAA-sanctioned seasons ... it also would be only the 30th all-time loss for UNC in NCAA-sanctioned seasons (661-29-22/.944)
• Maryland would become the 13th team ever to post two "non-losses" (wins/ties) vs. UNC, with a current series record of 0-30-1 vs. the Tar Heels (1-1 tie in 2002, @UNC).
• Would join Santa Clara (2004, rd-of-16) and Notre Dame ('07, rd-of-16) as only teams ever to beat UNC in the NCAAs, prior to the quarterfinals
• Would hand UNC its 8th all-time loss in the NCAAs (102-7-1; .932)
• Would become 4th team ever to beat UNC in the NCAAs on its home surface, Fetzer Field (73-3-1/.955 ... Notre Dame 1-0 in 1995 semifinals; Santa Clara 1-0/OT in 2004 rd-of-16; Florida State 1-1 in 2005 quarterfinals (FSU advanced on PKs); and ND 3-2 in 2007 rd-of-16)
• Would hand UNC its 9th all-time loss at home (284-8-6/.963; in NCAA-sanctioned seqasons, since '82)
• Would become 4th team ever to post two "non-losses" vs. UNC at Fetzer Field (from '82-'09), with the earlier 1-1 game in 2002 ... Notre Dame has beaten UNC three times at Fetzer, Duke has two wins and a tie vs. UNC at Fetzer, and Florida State has posted two ties vs. UNC at Fetzer)


TOUGH TO BEAT – UNC’s all-time record (661-29-22) in 28 NCAA seasons (1982-2009) includes only 12 opponents that have totaled at least two games vs. the Tar Heels that were not losses (wins or ties) ... Notre Dame is one of those teams with two “non-losses” vs. UNC and owns the best win pct. from that group (.294: 4-11-2),followed by Miami's .286 (2-5-0) and Santa Clara’s .211 (4-15-0) ... all other teams (besides ND, Miami and SCU) are only 19-626-20 vs. UNC (.044), with ND and SCU accounting for roughly one-fourth of the all-time wins over UNC (8-of-29) ... Florida State could meet UNC in the 2009 NCAA semifinals and would have the chance to become the third team ever to beat UNC three or more times (albeit in more meetings, current 2-22-2 series record, than ND and SCU) ... here’s the list of teams with at least two wins/ties vs. UNC (series records include only NCAA-sanctioned varsity games):

Pct. – Team (record vs. UNC)
.294 – Notre Dame (4-11-2); coach Chris Petrucelli 2-5-2/Randy Waldrum 2-6-0
.286 – Miami (2-5-0); all games coached by Tricia Taliaferro  
.211 – Santa Clara (4-15-0); all games coached by Jerry Smith
.125 – Connecticut (2-14-0); all games coached by Len Tsantiris
.118 – George Mason (1-14-2)
.115 – Florida State (2-22-2); Heather Kerby-Nelson 0-7-0/Patrick Baker 1-9-0/Mark Krikorian 1-6-2
.111 – Stanford (0-7-2)
.094 – Central Florida (0-13-3)
.071 – William & Mary (1-19-1)
.071 – Duke (2-32-1)
.048 – N.C. State (1-39-2)
.028 – Virginia (0-34-2)

10 other teams have one win vs. UNC: South Carolina (1-1-0), Cortland State (1-1-0), Missouri-St. Louis (1-2-0), Penn State (1-4-0), Virginia Tech (1-6-0), Florida (1-7-0), UMass (1-7-0), Texas A&M (1-12-0), Wake Forest (1-23-0) and Clemson (1-23-0)

Most wins plus ties (non-losses) vs. UNC
6 – Notre Dame  (4-11-2)
4 – Santa Clara  (4-14-0)
4 – Florida State  (2-22-2)
3 – Duke (2-41-1), George Mason (1-14-2), N.C. State (1-40-2) and UCF (0-16-3)
2 – UConn (2-16-0), William & Mary (1-20-1), Stanford (0-7-2) and Virginia (0-41-2)

Teams with multiple wins vs. UNC
4 – Notre Dame and Santa Clara
2 – Connecticut, Duke and Miami


NCAA TOURNAMENT SUCCESS – Only five teams have knocked UNC out of the NCAAs prior to the title game ... of those teams, only one has gone on to win the NCAA title (ND, in 1995):

Team that have defeated/advanced past UNC in the NCAAs (prior to the final game)
1995 – Notre Dame (semifinals) ... beat Portland in final
2002 – Santa Clara (semifinals) ... lost to Portland in final
2004 – Santa Clara (round-of-16) ... lost to Notre Dame in semifinals
2005 – Florida State (quarterfinals/PKs) ... lost to UCLA in semifinals
2007 – Notre Dame (round-of-16) ... lost to Florida State in semifinals

Notes: UNC advanced to the quarterfinals in 25 of its previous 27 NCAA seasons (24 trips to the semifinals; 22 title-game appearances and 19 NCAA titles ... lost 1985 final vs. George Mason, 0-2 ... lost '98 final vs. Florida, 0-1 ... lost '01 final vs. Santa Clara, 0-1).

Primetime Performers of the Week #11 (pre-release)

Here is the 12th group of honorees for CollegeSoccer360's Primetime Performers of the Week – a group of players who delivered some clutch play for their teams in the recent opening weekend of NCAA Tournament play (note that the official release, via the "Awards" tab, will be posted later today):


CollegeSoccer360.com – Primetime Performers of the Week #12 (Nov. 13-15)

Boston College – Amy Caldwell (F/D, Jr.; Braintree, MA), Natalie Crutchfield (M, Jr.; Acton, MA)

California – Lisa Kevorkian (F, Sr./RS-Jr.; Arcadia, CA)

Connecticut – Brittany Taylor (D, 5th-Yr. Sr.; Campbell Hall, NY)

Florida State – Jessica Price (F, Jr./RS-So.; Libertyville, IL

Maryland – Mallory Baker (D, Jr./RS-So.; Brick, NJ)

Michigan State – Jill Flietstra (G, So.; Hudsonville, MI)

North Carolina – Lucy Bronze (M, Fr.; Northumberland, England)

Notre Dame – Melissa Henderson (F, So; Garland, TX)

Oklahoma State – Adrianna Franch (G, Fr.; Salina, KS) 

Oregon St. – Rachel Axon (M, Sr.; London, England), Courtney Wetzel (D, Jr.; Puylallup, WA)

Portland – Halley Kreminski (F, So.; Eagle, ID)

St. John's – Kristin Russell (G, So.; St. Petersburg, FL)

Santa Clara – Bianca Henninger (G, So.; Los Gatos, CA), Anessa Patton (F, Jr.; Fresno, CA)

South Carolina – Brooke Jacobs (F, Jr.; Chambersburg, PA)

Stanford – Christen Press (F, Jr.; Palos Verdes Estates, CA)

Texas A&M – Emily Peterson (D, Sr.; Tulsa, OK)

UCLA – Sydney Leroux (F, So.; Vancouver, B.C.)

Virginia – Sinead Farrelly (M, Jr.; Havertown, PA)

Virginia Tech – Marika Gray (F, Jr.; Alexandria, VA)

Wake Forest – Casey Luckhurst (M, Jr.; Boca Raton, FL)

Wisconsin – Roxanne Carlson (M, Jr.; Cedarburg, WI), Michelle Dalton (G, Jr./RS-So.; Mt. Prospect, IL)

Historical Overview (NCAA Round-of-16; since 2001)

(note: all research on this page courtesy of CS360 founder/editor Pete LaFleur ... please credit CollegeSoccer360.com accordingly, when reprinting or referencing this data)


In addition to the information below, CLICK HERE (or scroll down) for earlier blog post that features list of active streaks for reaching the NCAA round-of-16 ... for similar list of round-of-32 streaks, scroll down nine blog posts or CLICK HERE.


• • •


Following below are various lists of NCAA round-of-16 conference-entry history, during the nine years of the 64-team format (since 2001):


CONFERENCE ENTRIES IN THE ROUND-OF-16During the past nine seasons, dating back to the first year of the NCAA 64-team format, the Atlantic Coast Conference has led the way with 36 total entrants in the round--of-16 (4.0 per year) ... next on that list is the Pacific-10 with 21 round-of-16 qualifiers since 2001, followed by the BIG EAST (19), West Coast Conference (17), Big Ten (15), Big 12 (15) and Southeastern Conference  (11) ... the ACC and Pac-10 have combined to produce 40% of the round-of-16 entrants (57 of 144) during the past nine seasons ... the top-six conferences on this list – ACC, Pac-10, BIG EAST, WCC, Big Ten and Big 12 – have combined to produce 85% of the teams in the round-of-16 (135 of 144) from 2001-09.


NCAA ROUND--OF-16 TEAMS SINCE 2001  (sorted by conferences)

36 – ACC  (UNC 9, FSU 7, VA 7, BC 4, Duke 3, Clemson 2, Maryland 2, Va. Tech 1, WFU 1)

21 – Pac-10  (UCLA 9, Stanford 6, USC 2, Arizona 1, Cal 1, Oregon State 1, Washington 1)

19– BIG EAST  (ND 7, UConn 5, Rutgers 2, WVU 2, BC 1, Marquette 1, Villanova 1)

17 – West Coast Conference  (Portland 9, Santa Clara 6, Pepperdine 2)


16 – Big Ten  (PennSt 6, Illinois 3, Mich. 2, Indiana 1, Minn. 1, OhioSt 1, Purdue 1, Wisconsin 1)
15 – Big 12  (Texas A&M 7, Nebraska 3, Texas 3, Colorado 1, Kansas 1)

11 – Southeastern Conference  (Florida 5, Tennessee 5, South Carolina 1)


3 – Ivy League  (Dartmouth, Princeton, Yale)

2 – Atlantic-10  (Dayton, Richmond)
1 – Big West  
(Cal Staate Fullerton)

1 – Colonial Athletic Association  (James Madison)

1 – Conference USA  (Cincinnati)
1 – Mountain West  
(BYU)


OLD RELIABLES – There have been a total of 51 teams that have advanced to the NCAA round-of-16 since 2001, led by these 14 teams:


Teams with the most NCAA round-of-16 appearances since 2001
9 – North Carolina ... 2001-09
9 – Portland ... 2001-09 
9 – UCLA ... 2001-09
 
7 – Florida State ... 2002-03, '05-'09
7 – Notre Dame ... 2002, '04-'09 
7 – Texas A&M ... 2001-03, '05-'06, '08-'09
7 – Virginia ... 2001-02, '05-'09

6 – Penn State ... 2001-03, '05-'07
6 – Santa Clara ... 2001-05, '0
6 – Stanford ... 2001-02, '06-'09

5 – Boston College ... 2004 (BIG EAST); 2005-06, '08-'09 (ACC)
5 – Connecticut ... 2001-04, '07
5 – Florida ... 2001, '03, '06-'08
5 – Tennessee ... 2002-03, '04, '06, '07

Note: teams with three round-of-16 appearances since 2001 include: Duke, Illinois, Nebraska and Texas ... teams with two round-of-16 trips over the past nine seasons include: Clemson, Maryland, Michigan, Pepperdine, Rutgers, USC and West Virginia ... these teams have made one final-16 appearances since '01: Arizona, BYU, California, CS Fullerton, Cincinnati, Colorado, Dartmouth, Dayton, Kansas, Indiana, James Madison, Marquette, Minnesota, Ohio State, Oregon State, Princeton, Purdue, Richmond, South Carolina, Villanova, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest, Washington, Wisconsin and Yale. 

Conferences with the most different teams in the NCAA round-of-16 (since '01)
9 teams – Atlantic Coast Conference
8 teams – Big Ten Conference
7 teams – Pacific-10 Conference
7 teams – BIG EAST Conference

5 teams – Big 12 Conference
3 teams – West Coast Conference
3 teams – Southeastern Conference
3 teams – Ivy League
2 teams – Atlantic-10 Conference

ROUND-OF-16 ENTRANTS SINCE 2001  (sorted by conference) 

Atlantic Coast Conference  (36 appearances, by 9 teams)
North Carolina (9) ... 2001-09
Florida State (7) ... 2002-03, '05-'09
Virginia (7) ... 2001-02, '05-'09
Boston College (4) ... 2005-06, '08-'09 (also '04, as member of BIG EAST)
Duke (3) ... 2004, '07, '08
Clemson (2) ... 2001, '06
Maryland (2) ... 2004, '09 
Virginia Tech (1) ... 2009
Wake Forest (1) ... 2009


Pacific-10 Conference  (21 appearances, by 7 teams)
UCLA (9) ... 2001-09
Stanford (6) ... 2001-02, '06-'09
USC (2) ... 2007, '08
Arizona (1) ... 2005
California (1) ... 2005 
Oregon State (1) ... 2009
Washington (1) ... 2004


BIG EAST Conference  (19 appearances, by 7 teams)
Notre Dame (7) ... 2002, '04-'09 
Connecticut (5) ... 2001-04, '07
Rutgers (2) ... 2001, '08
West Virginia (2) ... 2003, '07 
Boston College (1) ... 2004 (also 2005-06, '08-'09, as member of ACC)
Marquette (1) ... 2005
Villanova (1) ... 2003

West Coast Conference  (17 appearances, by 3 teams)

Portland (9) ... 2001-09 
Santa Clara (6) ... 2001-05, '09
Pepperdine (2) ... 2002, '05

 

Big Ten Conference  (16 appearances, by 8 teams)

Penn State (6) ... 2001-03, '05-'07
Illinois (3) ... 2004, '06, '08
Michigan (2) ... 2002-03 
Indiana (1) ... 2007
Minnesota (1) ... 2008
Ohio State (1) ... 2004
Purdue (1) ... 2003

Wisconsin (1) ... 2009


Big 12 Conference  (15 appearances, by 5 teams)
Texas A&M (7) ... 2001-03, '05-'06, '08-'09
Nebraska (3) ... 2001-02, '04 
Texas (3) ... 2004, '06, '07 
Colorado (1) ... 2006
Kansas (1) ... 2003


Southeastern Conference  (11 appearances, by 3 teams)
Florida (5) ... 2001, '03, '06-'08
Tennessee (5) ... 2002-03, '04, '06, '07
South Carolina (1) ... 2009


Ivy League  (3 appearances, by 3 teams)
Dartmouth (1) ... 2002
Princeton (1) .... 2004
Yale (1) ... 2005


Atlantic-10 Conference  (2 appearances, by 2 teams)

Dayton (1) ... 2001

Richmond (1) ... 2002


Big West Conference  (1 appearance)

Cal State Fullerton (1) ... 2005


Colonial Athletic Association  (1 appearance)
James Madison (1) ... 2008


Conference USA  (1 appearance)
Cincinnati (1) ... 2001  (current member of the BIG EAST)


Mountain West Conference  (1 appearance)
BYU (1) ... 2003



Conferences w/ Most Rd-of-16 Entrants in One Season (since '01)

7 – ACC in 2009
5 – ACC in 2008 and '06

4 – ACC in 2007 and '05

3 – ACC in 2004, '02 and '01 ... BIG EAST in 2007, '04 and '03 ... Big 12 in 2006 ...
     Pac-10 in 2009, '08, '05 ... WCC in 2005 and '02 ... Big Ten in 2003



Yearly Conference Qualifiers in NCAA Round-of-16 (since '01)

Conf. ......... '01...'02...'03...'04...'05...'06...'07...'08...'09

ACC ............ 3 ... 3 ... 2 ... 3 ... 4 ... 5 .... 4 .... 5 ... 7

BIG EAST ... 2 ... 2 ... 3 ... 3 ... 2 ... 1 .... 3 .... 2 ... 1      

Big 12 ......... 2 ... 2 ... 2 ... 2 ... 1 ... 3 .... 1 .... 1 ... 1

Pac-10 ........ 2 ... 2 ... 1 ... 2 ... 3 ... 2 .... 3 .... 3 ... 3

WCC .......... 2 ... 3 ... 2 ... 2 ... 3 ... 1 ..... 1 .... 1 ... 2

SEC ........... 1 ... 1 ... 2 ... 1 ... X ... 2 .... 2 .... 1 ... 1       

Big Ten ...... 1 ... 2 ... 3 ... 2 ... 1 ... 2 ..... 2 .... 2 ... 1

Ivy ............. 1 in 2001 ... 1 in 2004 ... 1 in 2005  
A-10 ..........1 in 2001 ... 1 in 2002
Big West ... 1 in 2005
Colonial ..... 1 in 2008
C-USA ...... 1 in 2001     
Mt-West .... 1 in 2003


Conference High/Low Number of Qualifiers in NCAA Rd-of-16 (since '01)
ACC – high of 7 in 2009 ... low of 2 in 2003

BIG EAST – high of 3 in 2003, '04, '07 ... low of 1 in 2006, '09

Big 12 – high of 3 in 2006 ... low of 1 in 2005, '07, '08, '09
Pac-10 – high of 3 in 2005, '07, '08, '09 ... low of 1 in 2003
WCC – high of 3 in 2002, '05 ... low of 1 in 2006, '07, '08
SEC – high of 2 in 2003, '06, '07
Big Ten – high of 3 in 2003 ... low of 1 in 2001, '05, '09


Different Conferences Represented in NCAA Rd-of-16 (since '01)

2001 – 10 conferences with teams in final-16

2002 – 8 conferences with teams in final-16

2003 – 8 conferences with teams in final-16


2004 – 8 conferences with teams in final-16

2005 – 8 conferences with teams in final-16

2006 – 7 conferences with teams in final-16


2007 – 7 conferences with teams in final-16

2008 – 8 conferences with teams in final-16

2009 – 7 conferences with teams in final-16


Note: avg. of 7.9 conferences represented in round-of-16 (since '01) ... most conferences represented in one round-of-16 since 2001 is 10 (in '01), fewest is seven ('06, '07, '09)



YEARLY NCAA ROUND-OF-16 QUALIFIERS  (sorted by conference) 

2001

3 – ACC  (Clemson, North Carolina, Virginia)

2 – BIG EAST  (Connecticut, Rutgers)

2 – Big 12  (Nebraska, Texas A&M)

2 – Pac-10  (Stanford, UCLA)
2 – WCC  (Portland, Santa Clara)
1 – Atlantic-10  (Dayton)

1 – Big Ten  (Penn State)
1 – C-USA  (Cincinnati)
1 – Ivy League  (Dartmouth)
1 – SEC  (Florida)


2002

3 – ACC (Florida State, North Carolina, Virginia)

3 – WCC  (Pepperdine, Portland, Santa Clara)
2 – Pac-10  (Stanford, UCLA)
2 – BIG EAST  (Connecticut, Notre Dame)
2 – Big 12  (Nebraska, Texas A&M)
2 – Big Ten  (Michigan, Penn State)
1 – Atlantic-10  (Richmond)
1 – SEC  (Tennessee)


2003

3 – BIG EAST  (Connecticut, Villanova, West Virginia)
3 – Big Ten  (Michigan, Penn State, Purdue)
2 – ACC  (Florida State, North Carolina)
2 – Big 12  (Kansas, Texas A&M)
2 – SEC  (Florida, Tennessee)
2 – WCC (Portland, Santa Clara
1 – Mt-West  (BYU)
1 – Pac-10  (UCLA)


2004

3 – ACC (Duke Maryland, North Carolina)
3 – BIG EAST  (Bsoton College, Connecticut, Notre Dame)

2 – Big Ten  (Illinois, Ohio State)
2 – Big 12  (Nebraska, Texas)
2 – Pac-10  (UCLA, Washington)

2 – WCC  (Portland, Santa Clara)
1 – Ivy League  (Princeton)
1 – SEC  (Tennessee)


2005

4 – ACC  (Boston College, Florida State, North Carolina, Virginia)

3 – Pac-10  (Arizona, California, UCLA)

3 – WCC  (Pepperdine, Portland, Santa Clara)

2 – BIG EAST  (Marquette, Notre Dame)

1 – Big Ten  (Penn State)
1 – Big 12  (Texas A&M)
1 – Big West  (CS Fullerton)

1 – Ivy League  (Yale)


2006

5 – ACC  (Boston College, Clemson, Florida State. North Carolina, Virginia)
3 – Big 12  (Colorado, Texas, Texas A&M)

2 – Big Ten  (Illinois, Penn State)

2 – Pac-10  (Stanford, UCLA)

2 – SEC  (Florida, Tennessee)
1 – BIG EAST  (Notre Dame)
1 – WCC  (Portland)


2007

4 – ACC  (Duke, Florida State, North Carolina), Virginia) 

3 – BIG EAST  (Connecticut, Notre Dame, West Virginia)

3 – Pac-10  (Stanford, UCLA, USC)

2 – Big Ten  (Indiana, Penn State)
2 – SEC  (Florida, Tennessee)
1 – Big 12  (Texas)
1 – WCC  (Portland)


2008

5 – ACC  (Boston College, Duke, Florida State, North Carolina, Virginia)

3 – Pac-10  (Stanford, UCLA, USC)
2 – BIG EAST  (Notre Dame, Rutgers)
2 – Big Ten  (Illinois, Minnsota)
1 – Big 12  (Texas A&M)
1 – Colonial  (James Madison)
1 – SEC  (Florida)
1 – WCC  (Portland)


2009

7 – ACC  (Boston College, Florida St., Maryland, No.Carolina, Virginia, Va. Tech, Wake Forest)

3 – Pac-10  (Oregon State, Stanford, UCLA)
2 – WCC  (Portland, Santa Clara)
1 – BIG EAST  (Notre Dame)

1 – Big Ten  (Wisconsin)
1 – Big 12  (Texas A&M)
1 – SEC  (South Carolina)

NCAA Round-of-16 Appearance Streaks

The 2009 NCAA round-of-16 will include seven teams – UNC, UCLA, Portland, ND, FSU, UVa and Stanford – with senior classes that have advanced to the final-16 in each of the past four seasons. Several of those programs have longer NCAA round-of-16 streaks, led by UNC (28 straight round-of-16 appearances), UCLA (11) and Portland (10), plus Notre Dame (6), Florida State (5) and Virginia (5):


Active Streaks of Reaching the NCAA round-of-16
(updated as of 2009 NCAAs; research courtesy of CollegeSoccer360.com)

28 – North Carolina  (1982-2009)  
11 – UCLA  (1999-2009) 
10 – Portland  (2000-09)  
6 – Notre Dame  (2004-09)  
5 – Florida State  (2005-09) 
5 – Virginia  (2005-09)  
4 – Stanford  (2006-09)  


Notes: UCLA lost to BYU (0-2) in the 1998 second round (that was the third varsity season for the Bruins) ... Portland went 12-7-1 in 1999 and did not qualify for the '99 NCAAs (48-team field) ... Notre Dame lost to Michigan in the 2003 NCAA second round (0-1) ...  Florida State was edged by Boston College in PKs during the 2004 NCAA first round (0-0/1-3 PKs) ... Virginia lost to Duke in the 2004 NCAA second round (0-3) ... Stanford lost to St. Louis in the 2005 NCAA first round (0-2).

Senior Salute (UNC seniors post 90th career victory; updated thru 11/15 games)

This update includes the second-round NCAA Tournament games played on Nov. 15, involving 15 of the teams on this list. The North Carolina senior class reached 90 career wins (90-9-4) following Sunday's 4-0 win over Georgia, while the Notre Dame seniors (89-10-4) now are one win away from that milestone.


Here's a bonus look at the programs with the most total games played over the past four seasons: North Carolina (103 games), Notre Dame (103), Florida State (99), Florida (98), UCLA (96), Texas A&M (96), Penn State (95), Stanford (93), Denver (93), Oklahoma State (93), Texas (92), West Virginia (92), BYU (91), Purdue (91), South Carolina (91), USC (90), Portland (89) and Wake Forest (89).


The teams listed below include 11 of the 16 still alive in the 2009 NCAAs: UNC, ND, UCLA, Portland, Stanford, FSU, A&M, Florida, Wake Forest, BC and South Carolina.

 

Here's the complete updated list of the nation's winningest senior classes (note: when referencing this list, please credit CollegeSoccer360.com with the research and – if possible – provide a link to this blog post ... click on post headline for direct URL). 


Current Four-Year Records in D-I Women's Soccer (top senior classes; '06-'09)
(research compiled by CollegeSoccer360.com; yearly records are 2006...'07...'08...'09)

(1) ... 90-9-4  (.893) ... North Carolina  (27-1-0...19-4-1 ... 25-1-2 ... 19-3-1)
(2) ... 89-10-4  (.884) ... Notre Dame  (25-1-1 ... 19-5-2 ... 26-1-0 ... 19-3-1)
(3) ... 82-9-5  (.880) ... UCLA  (21-4-0 ... 20-2-2 ... 22-1-2 ... 19-2-1)


(4) ... 75-11-3  (.860) ... Portland  (17-4-3 ... 18-4-0 ... 20-2-0 ... 20-1-0)
(5) ... 74-11-8  (.839) ... Stanford  (15-6-2 ... 15-3-5 ... 22-2-1 ... 22-0-0)
(6) ... 71-17-11  (.773) ... Florida State  (18-4-4 ... 18-6-3 ... 17-3-3 ... 18-4-1)


(7) ... 68-21-7  (.745) ... Texas A&M  (17-6-1 ... 18-4-2 ... 18-5-1 ... 15-6-3)
(8) ... 67-17-9  (.769) ... Denver  (19-3-1 ... 12-5-5 ... 19-3-2 ... 17-6-1)
(9) ... 66-17-8  (.769) ... BYU  (13-3-4 ... 17-4-2 ... 18-6-0 ... 18-4-2)
....... 66-21-11  (.730) ... Florida  (14-6-5 ... 17-5-3 ... 19-4-1 ... 16-6-2)

(11) ... 65-23-7  (.721) ... Penn State  (18-5-3 ... 18-4-2 ... 16-8-0 ... 13-6-2)
(12) ... 64-16-10  (.767) ... Navy  (21-2-1 ... 14-5-4 ... 15-4-3 ... 14-5-2)
......... 64-17-12  (.753) ... Oklahoma State  (17-3-3 ... 14-6-3 ... 18-1-4 ... 15-7-2)
(14) ... 63-17-6  (.767) ... Charlotte  (13-5-2 ... 16-5-1 ... 18-4-1 ... 16-3-2)

(15) ... 59-17-11  (.741) ... Milwaukee  (16-4-2 ... 13-4-4 ... 18-3-2 ... 12-6-3)
......... 59-19-12  (.722) ... USC  (11-5-5 ... 20-3-2 ... 16-5-2 ... 12-6-3)
......... 59-22-6  (.713) ... Memphis   (11-6-3 ... 17-4-1 ... 15-5-2 ... 16-7-0)

(18) ... 58-20-7  (.724) ... William & Mary  (16-1-4 ... 15-5-2 ... 15-7-1 ... 12-7-0)
......... 58-21-12  (.703) ... Purdue  (14-6-3 ... 20-2-3 ... 12-7-3 ... 12-6-3)
......... 58-24-6  (.693) ... UNC Greensboro  (13-8-2 ... 16-5-1 ... 16-4-3 ... 13-7-0)