Nov. 6, 2010

CARY, N.C. -
The No. 2 seed Maryland Terrapin women's soccer team (17-2-1/7-2-1 ACC) plays No. 5 seed Wake Forest for the 2010 ACC Championship on Sunday, Nov. 7 at 2 p.m. at WakeMed Stadium at the WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary, N.C.
The game will be televised live on FOX Sports Carolina/FOX Sports South, Comcast Mid-Atlantic and FOX Sports Florida. The match will be shown on a delay on NESN at 6 p.m. Mike Hodgewood will handle the play-by-play, while Jenn Hildreth will provide the analysis.
Fans can also listen to the game on-line at WMUCSports.com.
ACC Championship Central
For complete information on the 2010 ACC Women's Soccer Championship, including the complete schedule, ticket information, Gametracker links and multimedia information, click here.
As the No. 2 Seed
This season marks just the second time Maryland will be the No. 2 seed at the ACC Tournament. The only other time the Terps were the No. 2 seed was 1999. Maryland topped Duke, 2-1, in the first round before falling to Wake Forest in the semis by a 1-0 final.
Maryland In The ACC Tournament
Maryland has an all-time record of 10-19-3 (Maryland won all three ties on penalty kicks) in ACC Tournament games dating back to the first year of the event in 1988.
The 2nd-seeded Terps won their first ACC tournament game since 2003 with a 1-0 decision vs. Duke in 2010. Senior Molly Dreska scored the game-winner in the 71st minute, finishing a cross from junior Sade Ayinde into to the upper right 90 from 17 yards out. Senior Colleen Deegan started the play with a nice long ball to Ayinde at the left corner of the Blue Devil 18. Redshirt junior Yewande Balogun made three of her four stops in the first half to keep a rested Duke squad off the board.
Maryland advanced to its first ACC title game with a 1-0 overtime victory over Boston College in the semis. Sophomore Danielle Hubka scored the game's lone goal 55 seconds into the first overtime, finishing a long ball sent over the top of the Eagle backline by junior Skyy Anderson. Terp keeper Yewande Balogun was tremendous in goal, making six saves.
The Terps entered the 2009 tournament as the No. 6 seed, but once again drew the North Carolina Tar Heels in the opening round. UNC won the match 3-0.
Maryland made the 2005 tournament as the No. 8 seed. Maryland matched-up with No. 1 seed North Carolina and was dealt a 3-1 defeat by the Tar Heels. UNC scored three goals in the first 10 minutes. Ashly Kennedy scored Maryland's goal in the 69th minute.
In 2004, the Terps played NC State in the first round game at Ludwig Field (Boston College had not yet joined the conference). Maryland was the No. 8 seed, while the Wolfpack was seeded ninth. The game was played to a 0-0 tie through 110 minutes so a shootout determined which team would advance. All-ACC goalkeeper Nikki Resnick made two huge saves in the shootout and Maryland advanced 4-2. The Terps played No. 1 seed North Carolina in the quarterfinals and that game went into overtime with a 0-0 score, but UNC got a goal from Heather O'Reilly in the 103rd minute to advance with a 1-0 win.
2003 was the last time the Terrapins won an ACC tournament game, topping Clemson 2-1 in the quarterfinals. Maryland, the No. 6 seed, got two goals from Kimmy Francis to defeat the No. 3 seed Tigers. No. 2 seed Florida State knocked off the Terps in the semifinals, 1-0.
In 2002, Maryland advanced the ACC Tournament semifinals for the first time in three years, as they knocked off host Florida State, 4-2 on Nov. 7, before a television audience on Sunshine Network. All four goals in the win came from freshmen: Ali Andrzejewski, Simone Dekker, Kimmy Francis and Mallory Mahar. Maryland lost North Carolina, the eventual league champion, North Carolina in the semifinals, 4-0.
In 1999, as its highest seed ever, No. 2 seed Maryland advanced to the semifinals with a 2-1 quarterfinal win over No. 7 seed Duke on Nov. 4, 1999 before falling to No. 3 seed Wake Forest, 1-0, in the semis on Nov. 5.
Maryland had its only runs to the ACC finals in 1995 and 1997, the only other time the ACC Women's Soccer Tournament was held at Wake Forest. In 1995, as the No. 3 seed, the Terps defeated Clemson 2-0 in the first round and NC State 1-0 in the second round before falling to eventual champion North Carolina 3-0.
In 1997, Maryland escaped NC State in the first round, 4-3, in penalty kicks after tying 1-1 in regulation. The Terps advanced to the finals with a 2-1 win over Duke. In that win, Jackie Mynarski scored Maryland's first goal, while Keri Sarver added the winner. Ali Wolff made five saves for the win. The Terps dropped the final to North Carolina, 4-0.
| Maryland's Probable Starters |
| Pos. |
No. |
Player |
Yr. |
Ht. |
Hometown |
GP/GS |
G |
A |
Pts. |
| F |
3 |
Jasmyne Spencer |
Jr. |
5-1 |
Bay Shore, N.Y. |
20/20 |
9 |
5 |
23 |
| F |
17 |
Ashley Grove |
Jr. |
5-6 |
Rochester, N.Y. |
19/18 |
8 |
5 |
21 |
| M |
2 |
Domenica Hodak |
So. |
5-4 |
West Sayville, N.Y. |
19/19 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
| M |
10 |
Lydia Hastings |
Jr. |
5-6 |
Rehoboth Beach, Del. |
19/19 |
4 |
3 |
11 |
| M |
21 |
Molly Dreska |
Sr. |
5-6 |
Rockville Centre, N.Y. |
20/20 |
3 |
1 |
7 |
| M |
34 |
Danielle Hubka |
So. |
5-5 |
Strongsville, Ohio |
18/7 |
5 |
0 |
10 |
| D |
7 |
Caitlin McDowell |
Sr. |
5-4 |
Plano, Texas |
20/20 |
3 |
11 |
17 |
| D |
12 |
Mallory Baker |
Jr. |
5-9 |
Brick, N.J. |
20/20 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
| D |
22 |
Colleen Deegan |
Sr. |
5-10 |
Centreville, Va. |
20/20 |
3 |
4 |
10 |
| D |
44 |
Skyy Anderson |
Jr. |
5-5 |
Cambridge, Mass. |
14/7 |
0 |
4 |
4 |
| GK |
No. |
Player |
Yr. |
Ht. |
Hometown |
GP/GS |
GAA |
Sv. |
W-L-T |
| |
1 |
Yewande Balogun |
R-Jr. |
5-8 |
Bowie, Md. |
20/20 |
0.86 |
60 |
17-2-1 |
Scouting The Terps
Maryland is 17-2-1 after its 1-0 overtime victory over Boston College in the ACC Tournament semis. The Terps wrapped up the regular season with a program-best 7-2-1 mark in conference play.
Maryland opened the 2010 season with a comfortable 6-0 shutout over Iona (Ashley Grove paced the Terps with two goals and an assist in the win over the Gaels. Junior Lydia Hastings snapped a 22-game goal-scoring drought with a goal, while also adding two assists. Senior co-captain Caitlin McDowell moved to left back after playing in the midfield for three seasons, but that didn't effect her production as she tallied a pair of assists.
The Terps then had a short turnaround for a showdown with two-time defending Big 12 regular season champs Missouri (Ashley Grove third goal of the season was an insurance goal in the 71st minute, but that proved to be the game-winner when Mizzou scored again in the 78th minute to make it a 3-2 game, which is how it would finish.
Junior forward Jasmyne Spencer first goal of the season in the 74th minute.
The Terps then clinched the Lady Vol Classic title with a 4-0 win over 2009 Atlantic Sun champ Kennesaw State (Jasmyne Spencer, who was named the MVP of the tournament, and Ashley Grove and Domenica Hodak.
Maryland wasn't sharp vs. Stony Brook (Jasmyne Spencer and Kayla Clarke, who earned her first collegiate point on the goal.
Jasmyne Spencer off of an early throw-in led to the penalty kick that Ayinde burried.
The Terps fell behind thanks to an early, unconventional goal vs. Delaware (Ashley Grove netted her team-leading sixth goal to close out the scoring.
Maryland finished its non-conference schedule with a perfect 8-0-0 record thanks to two late goals by Jasmyne Spencer that gave the Terps a 2-1 come-from-behind victory in overtime over George Mason (recap | final stats). The Patriots took a 1-0 lead in the 10th minute, scoring on a free kick. Spencer netted the tying goal in the 80th minute on a terrific individual effort, going through three defenders to get off the initial shot and then working past two more Patriot defenders to fight for the ball before putting away the rebound. In the fouth minute of the first overtime, Colleen Deegan sent a long ball over the top of the Patriot defense. With a step on her defender, Spencer got on the end of the pass with only the goalkeeper to beat. Instead of rushing the shot Spencer showed a great deal of patience, skill and technical skill by waiting for Bodenschatz to commit before taking a shot that bounced just inside the right post.
The Terps fell behind to #14 Duke midway through the second half, but Jasmyne Spencer led the offensive attack with five shots.
Sophomore Jasmyne Spencer with a blistering one-timer from 18 yards out. The Cavaliers tied the match early in the second half on a rebound goal off of a blocked shot. The two teams traded penalty kicks midway through the second half, setting up Hubka's header off of a great corner kick from Olivia Wagner in the 74th minute. Redshirt junior Yewande Balogun made five saves in the win, but several of those were spectacular diving efforts that preserved the victory in the waning minutes.
The Terps suffered their first loss of the season, 1-0, at Virginia Tech (recap | final stats).
Maryland goalkeeper Ashley Grove, and sophomore Olivia Wagner each had a pair of shots.
Maryland earned arguably the biggest win in the program's history when it topped No. 2 Boston College (Ashley Grove corner kick to head home the game-winning goal with just eight seconds left on the clock to give the Terps the victory. The Eagles took a 1-0 lead early in the second half, but junior Amy O'Sullivan capitalized on a loose ball off of a Megan Gibbons' cross to tie the match in the 76th minute. Redshirt junior Yewande Balogun was solid in net for the Terps, especially in the first half when she made five of her seven saves. The victory over the No. 2 Eagles marks the highest-ranked opponent ever to go down in defeat at the hands of the Terps. Maryland's win over No. 3 UCLA in 2004 was the previous highest-ranked victory.
Junior Jasmyne Spencer scored the game's lone goal in the 68th minute to lead the Terps to a 1-0 road win at NC State (recap | final stats). The goal started with a great ball from senior Colleen Deegan, who played it back against the grain to sophomore Megan Gibbons down the sideline. Gibbons then slipped the ball into the box with a short cross that Spencer ran onto and one-timed into the back of the Wolfpack net.
Junior Jasmyne Spencer totaled a career-high five points on two goals and an assist to lead Maryland to a 4-0 rout of Clemson (Caitlin McDowell tied her career-high with four points on a goal and two assists. Senior Molly Dreska also scored in the victory, while juniors Skyy Anderson and Domenica Hodak each added assists. Redshirt junior Yewande Balogun made two saves to pick up her second full shutout of the season.
Maryland fell behind Wake Forest and ended up losing a 2-1 decision at the Demon Deacons (Ashley Grove finished a corner kick off assists from junior Sade Ayinde and sophomore Olivia Wager for the Terps' lone goal.
History was made in the 32nd meeting between the Terps and North Carolina on Sunday, Oct. 24. Junior Jasmyne Spencer, who was fouled just outside of UNC 18. Ayinde then took the free kick and sent it under the wall and into the right side of the net.
Jasmyne Spencer goal in the 62nd minute capped off another amazing come-from-behind victory for the Terps as they knocked off No. 8/9 Florida State, 2-1 (recap | final stats). FSU took a 1-0 lead early in the second half, but senior Colleen Deegan buried a free kick from 25 yards out inside the left post to tie the match in the 59th minute. Spencer then scored her team-leading fourth game-winning goal of the season to give the Terps their sixth conference win of the year.
The Terps wrapped up its regular season with its third straight 2-1 victory, this one coming against the Miami Hurricanes (Caitlin McDowell. The Hurricanes tied the match early in the second half, but Maryland's resilience showed again as it rallied for the game-winning goal in the 76th minute. Junior Skyy Anderson sent a long ball into the Miami box. A scramble bumped the ball into the air near the top of the box where McDowell flicked it to the right post where Hastings elevated and headed it into the goal. Miami's Brittney MacDonald tried to clear the ball, but it had already landed over the line for the score. Redshirt junior Yewande Balogun perserved the victory with five stops in the match, including a one-handed leaping save on a 1v1 situation with Miami's all-time leading scorer Brittney Steinbruch.
The 2nd-seeded Terps won their first ACC tournament game since 2003 with a 1-0 decision vs. Duke (recap | final stats). Senior Molly Dreska scored the game-winner in the 71st minute, finishing a cross from junior Sade Ayinde into to the upper right 90 from 17 yards out. Senior Colleen Deegan started the play with a nice long ball to Ayinde at the left corner of the Blue Devil 18. Redshirt junior Yewande Balogun made three of her four stops in the first half to keep a rested Duke squad off the board.
Maryland advanced to its first ACC title game with a 1-0 overtime victory over Boston College (recap | final stats) in the semis. Sophomore Danielle Hubka scored the game's lone goal 55 seconds into the first overtime, finishing a long ball sent over the top of the Eagle backline by junior Skyy Anderson. Terp keeper Yewande Balogun was tremendous in goal, making six saves.
| Maryland When ... |
| In ACC Matches |
7-2-1 |
| vs. Ranked Opponents |
5-0-1 |
| Home Matches |
9-0-1 |
| Away Matches |
5-2-0 |
| Neutral Matches |
3-0-0 |
| Leading at the Half |
8-0-0 |
| Tied at the Half |
7-1-1 |
| Trailing at the Half |
2-1-0 |
| Scoring First |
11-0-0 |
| In Overtime |
1-0-1 |
| Outshooting Opponent |
11-2-1 |
| Out-shot by Opponent |
6-0-0 |
| Terp Season Highs |
| Points |
20 |
Iona (8/20) |
| Goals |
6 |
Iona (8/20) |
| Assists |
8 |
Iona (8/20) |
| Shots |
29 |
Iona (8/20) |
| Shots On Goal |
17 |
Iona (8/20) |
| Corner Kicks |
13 |
Clemson (10/17) |
| Fouls |
16 |
at Wake Forest (10/21) |
| Saves |
7 |
Duke (9/26) |
| |
7 |
at Boston College (10/7) |
|
| Opponent Season Highs |
| Points |
7 |
at Seton Hall (9/8) |
| Goals |
2 |
Virginia (9/30) |
| |
2 |
Missouri (8/22) |
| |
2 |
at Seton Hall (9/8) |
| Assists |
3 |
at Seton Hall (9/8) |
| Shots |
18 |
vs. Duke (11/3) |
| Shots On Goal |
8 |
Duke (9/26) |
| |
8 |
at Boston College (10/7) |
| Corner Kicks |
8 |
Missouri (8/22) |
| |
8 |
vs. Duke (11/3) |
| Fouls |
18 |
vs. Duke (11/3) |
| Saves |
11 |
Iona (8/20) |
|
| Terp Individual Highs |
| Points |
5 |
Ashley Grove vs. Iona (8/20) |
| |
5 |
Jasmyne Spencer vs. Clemson (10/17) |
| Goals |
2 |
Ashley Grove vs. Iona (8/20) |
| |
2 |
Caitlin McDowell vs. Kennesaw State (8/29) |
| |
2 |
Jasmyne Spencer vs. Kennesaw State (8/29) |
| |
2 |
Sade Ayinde vs. Delaware (9/12) |
| |
2 |
Jasmyne Spencer vs. George Mason (9/17) |
| |
2 |
Jasmyne Spencer vs. Clemson (10/17) |
| |
2 |
Sade Ayinde at North Carolina (10/24) |
| Assists |
2 |
Lydia Hastings vs. Iona (8/20) |
| |
2 |
Caitlin McDowell vs. Iona (8/20) |
| |
2 |
Ashley Grove vs. Kennesaw State (8/29) |
| |
2 |
Caitlin McDowell vs. Clemson (10/17) |
| |
2 |
Caitlin McDowell vs. Miami (10/31) |
| Shots |
10 |
Jasmyne Spencer vs. Missouri (8/22) |
| Saves |
7 |
Yewande Balogun at Boston College (10/7) |
Scouting The Demon Deacons
Wake Forest is 12-7-2 overall on the season and finished the regular season with a 5-4-1 conference mark.
| 2010 Wake Forest Demon Deacons: 12-7-2, 5-4-1 ACC (Soccer America NR, NSCAA RV, TopDrawerSoccer.com #36) |
| Roster |
Schedule |
Statistics |
The Deacs opened their season with a 6-3-0 record in non-conference play. Wake Forest began ACC action with a 2-1 win at Duke and a 4-0 home win over Clemson. After a 1-0 overtime loss at Florida State, the Deacons posted back-to-back wins over NC State and Miami. Wake then tied Virginia Tech, 3-3, in Blacksburg, Va., before heading to Charlottesville and dropping a 2-1 decision at Virginia. The Deacs topped Maryland in Winston-Salem, 2-1, but closed the regular season with back-to-back losses to Boston College and North Carolina.
Wake Forest advanced to the ACC finals with a 3-1 win over No. 4 seed Florida State in the quarterfinals. In the semis, Wake took a 1-0 lead on No. 1 seed North Carolina early in the second half, but the Tar Heels tied the match in the 88th minute. The two teams went scoreless through two overtimes and the Demon Deacons won the shootout, 5-4, to advance to the finals.
Looking Ahead
The Terps are a good candidate to qualify for the NCAA Tournament and could host first- and second-round games on Nov. 12 and 14, respectively. The NCAA Tournament Selection Show is scheduled to be broadcast live on Monday, Nov. 8 on ESPNU at 4:30 p.m.
Pensky Named ACC Coach of the Year
Head coach Brian Pensky became just the third head coach in the history of Maryland women's soccer to earn the ACC Coach of the Year after leading the Terps to arguably the finest season in program history. The Terps finished the regular season with a 15-2-1 overall record for a .861 winning percentage, which is the highest in school history. Pensky also led his team to a 7-2-1 conference mark with the seven ACC wins nearly doubling the previous school record of four, which was reached in 1995, 1997, 1999 and 2009. Pensky's Terps have also reached No. 3 in the Soccer America Top 25, marking the highest all-time ranking for the program in any major poll.
Spencer Repeats As First Team All-ACC Selection
Junior forward Jasmyne Spencer has had another spectacular season and leads the Terps with 23 points on nine goals and five assists, which are the exact same numbers she has last season while earning first team All-ACC honors. She is the first Terp to be named to the All-ACC first team in back-to-back seasons since goalkeeper Nikki Resnick was selected in 2005 and 2006. The last field player to earn consecutive first team honors was Erin Taylor in 1995 and 1996. She currently ranks among the Top 25 in career points (10th, 48), goals (9th, 19), assists (23rd, 10), shots (9th, 144) and game-winning goals (4th, 8).
Spencer Earns Honors
Junior Jasmyne Spencer earned two major preseason honors heading into the 2010 season. Spencer became the first Terp in the program's history to be named to the MAC Hermann Trophy Preseason Watch List and then was named to Soccer America's Preseason All-America team.
Spencer enjoyed a breakthough season in her second year in the Terrapin program. The Bay Shore, N.Y., native started the year with the game-winning goal in the 3-0 win over Army and didn't slowed up from there. Spencer led the team with 25 points on 10 goals, including four game-winners, and was tied for second on the squad with five assists. Her 25 points were the most for a Terrapin in a season since 1998 when Keri Sarver set the school record with 49 points. Her 10 goals are also the most since 1999 when Jackie Mynarski had 11.
The preseason honors may have been based upon last season's production, but the 5-foot-1 dynamo has been just as productive early on in 2010 and has earned the honors to show it. Spencer earned three weekly honors following her MVP performance at the Lady Vol Classic (Aug. 27-29). She scored her first goal of the season in the 3-1 victory over host Tennessee and then scored the team's first two goals in the 4-0 shutout of Kennesaw State. In addition to being named the tournament MVP, Spencer was named the co-ACC Player of the Week, selected to the TopDrawerSoccer.com Team of the Week and was one of collegesoccer360.com's Primetime Performers of the Week. Spencer's ACC honor marks the first time since 2004 that a Terrapin has earned ACC POW honors.
Spencer continued to gain recognition following her career-best five-point output vs. Clemson as she was named to the TopDrawerSoccer.com Team of the Week.
Spencer followed up her 25-point 2009 season with 23 points so far this season, which makes her the first Terp since the 1997-98 seasons to have back-to-back 20+-point seasons. Keri Sarver (36-49), Emmy Harbo (24-36) and Robin McCullough (22-21) each had back-to-back 20+-point seasons in 1997-98.
Fighting To The Finish
Super Grover
Junior forward Ashley Grove is having the best season of her career, and is third on the team with 21 points and is tied for second with eight goals. She is working her way up the career points and goals charts as well. She is currently tied for 11th on the all-time points list with 46 career points and is tied for 13th on the all-time goals list with 17. She has also worked her way into the top 20 in career assists and is currently in a four-way tie for 13th with 12 career assists.
Ayinde Honored For Tar Heel Heroics
Junior Sade Ayinde led the Terps to its historic 2-1 win at No. 2 North Carolina (the first Maryland win over the Tar Heels in 32 matches) by scoring both goals in the final 12 minutes. For her efforts she is the third Terp this season to earn ACC Player of the Week honors. Ayinde was also selected as the NSCAA National Player of the Week, the ECAC Offensive Player of the Week, was chosen as a member of the TopDrawerSoccer.com Team of the Week for the second time this season and was named one of collegesoccer360.com's Primetime Performers of the Week.
Ayinde was previously selected to TopDrawerSoccer.com's Team of the Week following her performances vs. Seton Hall and Delaware. Ayinde scored the game-winning goals vs. both the Pirates and the Blue Hens with both game-winners coming on penalty kicks. It is the first recorded instance of a Maryland player tallying PK goals in back-to-back games in the 24-year history of the program.
Ayinde is working her way up several career charts as well. She is currently17th on the all-time points list with 38 career points and is 9th on the all-time assists list with 16.
McDowell Moving Up By Giving
Senior co-captain Caitlin McDowell may have moved to the back line this season, but that has not stopped her from continuing to lead the team in assists. The Plano, Texas, native is tops on the team with 11 assists, which gives her 23 for her career and tying her for fourth on the all-time lists.
McDowell's 11 assists this season is a remarkable achievement and is just the fourth time in the history of the Terrapin program a player has reached double-digit assists in a single-season.
She enterted the Top 25 in career points at Maryland with her two assist performance vs. Miami in the regular season finale. McDowell is tied for 21st with 35 career points.
Defining A Turnaround
Dynamite Deegs
Senior defender Jasmyne Spencer game-winning goal vs. the Wolfpack. Deegan was also named a CollegeSoccer360.com Primetime Player of the Week and was the second Terp this season to earn ACC Player of the Week honors.
Magnificent Seven
Maryland has six players with double-digit points for the first time since 2002. Juniors Jasmyne Spencer lead the way with 23 points apiece, while junior Ashley Grove is also over the 20-point plateau with 21. Senior Lydia Hastings has 11 points, while senior Colleen Deegan joined the double-digit brigade with her assist in the the ACC quarterfinals, which gave her 10 points on the season.Sophomore Danielle Hubka became the seventh Terp with at least 10 points this season with her game-winning goal in OT in the ACC semifinals vs. Boston College.
The 2002 team finished the season with eight players with double-digit points: Ali Andrzejewski (20), Audra Poulin (19), Katie Ludwig (16), Kimmy Francis (16), Simone Dekker (15), Jen Biscoe (13), Mallory Mahar (12) and Kim King (10).
Deegan and McDowell Earn Academic Honor
Seniors Caitlin McDowell were named first team CoSIDA Academic All-Region and will now be up for consideration for Academic All-America honors. Deegan is set to graduate in May with a dual degree in accounting and business management with a 3.68 GPA. McDowell will graduate in May with a degree in marketing with a 3.93 GPA..
Ranked Terps
Fresh off of their historic win at North Carolina, the Terps earned the highest ranking in program history, coming in at No. 3 in Soccer America Top 25, which the Terps remain for the second week in a row. The previous high ranking for Maryland was No. 4, which it achieved earlier this season and during the 1996 season.
Maryland moved up one spot to No. 4 in the latest NSCAA Top 25, tying the program best for that poll, and are also No. 4 (up one spot from last week) in TopDrawerSoccer.com's 2010 Tournament 64 Rankings, which, according to TDS.com's website, "are a running attempt to project the postseason college soccer tournament qualifiers, including every automatic conference berth."
Terps Toppling Top 10 Teams
Maryland has defeated a Top 10 ranked team 17 times in its history. The Terps' most memorable Top 10 victory, 2-1 at No. 2 North Carolina on Oct. 24, tied for he highest ranked opponent ever defeated by Maryland. The Terrapins defeated No. 2 Boston College on Oct. 7 in Chestnut Hill, Mass. Those two victories mark the first time in program history that Maryland has defeated two Top 10 teams in a single month. The Terps then added to that with another 2-1 win over No. 8 Florida State on Oct. 28. Here's a list of all of the Terps' Top 10 wins:
| Date |
Opponent |
Score |
| Oct. 28, 2010 |
#8 Florida State |
2-1 |
| Oct. 24, 2010 |
at #2 North Carolina |
2-1 |
| Oct. 7, 2010 |
at #2 Boston College |
2-1 |
| Oct. 8, 2009 |
#6 Virginia Tech |
3-1 |
| Aug. 25, 2006 |
at #10 Tennessee |
1-0 |
| Nov. 14, 2004 |
at #5 Penn State |
1-0 |
| Oct. 23, 2004 |
#10 Duke |
1-0 OT |
| Sept. 12, 2004 |
vs. #3 UCLA |
2-1 |
| Oct. 13, 2001 |
#8 Clemson |
1-0 OT |
| Aug. 29, 2000 |
#4 Penn State |
3-1 |
| Oct. 17, 1999 |
#9 Clemson |
2-1 OT |
| Sept. 19, 1999 |
at #9 Duke |
4-3 OT |
| Sept. 18, 1998 |
#9 Duke |
3-1 |
| Nov. 7, 1997 |
vs. #8 Duke |
2-1 |
| Oct. 12, 1997 |
#9 Clemson |
2-0 |
| Oct. 1, 1995 |
#7 Duke |
2-1 |
| Oct. 8, 1993 |
#8 William & Mary |
2-1 |
Non-Conference Success
Dating back to its 10-0 win over Mount St. Mary's in 2008, Maryland has won its last 19 matches vs. non-ACC opponents. The Terps have outscored its non-conference opposition 59-11 in those 19 victories.
The 19 straight wins over non-ACC foes breaks the school record which was set in 1996 when that squad of Terps won 17 consecutive non-conference games before losing at Notre Dame in the quarterfinals of the NCAA tournament.
100 And Counting At Ludwig Field
The Terps won their 100th match at Ludwig Field with a 6-0 victory over Iona on Aug. 20, 2010. Since its opening in 1995, Ludwig Field has proved to be a tremendous home-field advantage for the Terps women's soccer team. All-time Maryland is 108-46-17 (.681) at Ludwig Field.
Through the seasons, the Terps have had a knack for shutting teams out at Ludwig Field. Maryland has won 71 of its 108 victories (65.7%) at Ludwig Field via shutout. Add in the nine 0-0 ties the Terps have had at Ludwig Field and it totals 80 times that Maryland has shutout its opponent in 171 games (46.8%).
The Last Time ...
| Maryland |
| Team |
| Totaled 20 or more points in game |
20 vs. Iona (6-0, 8/20/10) |
| Totaled 15-19 points in a game |
16 vs. Loyola (5-2, 9/1/09) |
| Totaled 10-14 points in a game |
13 vs. Clemson (4-9, 10/14/10) |
| Scored seven or more goals in a game |
10 vs. Mount St. Mary's (10-0, 9/21/08) |
| Scored six goals in a game |
6 vs. Iona (6-0, 8/20/10) |
| Scored five goals in a game |
6 vs. Iona (6-0, 8/20/10) |
| Scored four goals in a game |
4 vs. Clemson (4-0, 10/14/10) |
| Scored three goals in a game |
4 vs. Delaware (4-1, 9/12/10) |
| Had six or more assists in a game |
8 vs. Iona (6-0, 8/20/10) |
| Had five assists in a game |
5 vs. Clemson (4-0, 10/14/10) |
| Took 30 or more shots in a game |
55 vs. Eastern Kentucky (0-0, 8/31/08) |
| Took 20-29 shots in a game |
20, vs. Clemson (4-0, 10/14/10) |
| Had 10 or more fouls in a game |
16 at Wake Forest (1-2, 10/21/10) |
| Won an overtime game |
1-0 vs. Boston College (11/5/10) |
| Individual |
| A Maryland player totaled six or more points |
8, Sara Gustafson vs. Howard (9-0, 10/11/00) |
| A Maryland player totaled five points |
5, Jasmyne Spencer vs. Clemson (4-0, 10/14/10) |
| A Maryland player totaled four points |
4, Caitlin McDowell at North Carolina (2-1, 10/24/10) |
| A Maryland player totaled three points |
3, Sade Ayinde at Seton Hall (3-2, 9/8/10) |
| A Maryland player scored four goals |
4, Sara Gustafson vs. Howard (9-0, 10/11/00) |
| A Maryland player scored three goals |
4, Sara Gustafson vs. Howard (9-9, 10/11/00) |
| A Maryland player scored two goals |
2, Sade Ayinde at North Carolina (2-1, 10/24/10) |
| A Maryland player scored a goal in three straight games |
Sade Ayinde (9/5-12/10 -Stony Brook, Seton Hall, Delaware) |
| A Maryland player scored the game-winning goal in three straight games |
Ashley Grove (8/20-27/10 - Iona, Missouri, Tennessee) |
| A Maryland player had assists in three straight games |
Caitlin McDowell (8/20-27/10 - Iona, Missouri, Tennessee) |
| A Maryland player had three assists |
3, Annesia Faulkner vs. Mount St. Mary's (10-0, 9/21/08) |
| A Maryland player had two assists |
2, Caitlin McDowell vs. Miami (2-1, 10/31/10) |
| A Maryland player had 10 or more shots |
10, Jasmyne Spencer vs. Missouri (3-2, 8/22/10) |
| A Maryland player had 5-9 shots |
6, Jasmyne Spencer vs. Florida State (2-1, 10/28/10) |
| A Maryland GK made 10 or more saves |
14, Nikki Resnick vs. Duke (0-0, 10/14/06) |
| |
|
| Opponent |
| Team |
| Totaled 15-19 points in a game |
16, at North Carolina (0-5, 9/28/08) |
| Totaled 10-14 points in a game |
10, vs. Bucknell (2-3, 8/29/08) |
| Scored seven or more goals in a game |
7, vs. Florida State (2-7, 11/8/01) |
| Scored six goals in a game |
6, at Notre Dame (0-6, 9/4/05) |
| Scored five goals in a game |
6, at Notre Dame (0-6, 9/4/05) |
| Scored four goals in a game |
4, vs. North Carolina (0-4, 10/1/05) |
| Scored three goals in a game |
3, vs. North Carolina (0-3, 11/4/09) |
| Had six or more assists in a game |
6, at North Carolina (0-5, 9/28/08) |
| Had five assists in a game |
6, at North Carolina (0-5, 9/28/08) |
| Took 30 or more shots in a game |
37, vs. Duke (0-0, 10/14/06) |
| Took 20-29 shots in a game |
22, vs. North Carolina (0-1, 11/1/09) |
| Had 10 or more fouls in a game |
18, vs. Duke (1-0, 11/3/10) |
| Individual |
| An opposing player totaled six or more points |
6, Courtney Jones, North Carolina (5-0, 9/28/08) |
| An opposing player totaled five points |
6, Courtney Jones, North Carolina (5-0, 9/28/08) |
| An opposing player totaled four points |
4, Kaley Fountain, Wake Forest (2-3, 10/29/09) |
| An opposing player totaled three points |
3, Meghan Lenczyk, Virginia (3-2, 9/30/10) |
| An opposing player scored four goals |
N/A |
| An opposing player scored three goals |
3, Courtney Jones, North Carolina (5-0, 9/28/08) |
| An opposing player scored two goals |
3, Courtney Jones, North Carolina (5-0, 9/28/08) |
| An opposing player had three assists |
3, Kacey White, North Carolina (1-3, 11/2/05) |
| An opposing player had two assists |
3, Kacey White, North Carolina (1-3, 11/2/05) |
| An opposing player had 10 or more shots |
12, Britteny Steinbruch (0-1, 10/14/07) |
| An opposing player had 5-9 shots |
5, Molly Pathman, vs. Duke (1-0, 11/3/10) |
| An opposing GK made 15 or more saves |
19, Stephanie Lunch, Eastern Kentucky (0-0, 8/21/08) |
| An opposing GK made 10 or more saves |
11, Jacquelyn Games, Iona (6-0, 8/20/10) |
Head Coach Brian Pensky
Brian Pensky is in his sixth season as the head coach of the Maryland women's soccer program. After helping lead the Terrapin men's program to three-straight appearances in the College Cup, Pensky took over the women's soccer program prior to the 2005 season. He has steadily built the program back to prominence and took it to its first NCAA Tournament berth since 2004 last season. Pensky owns an overall head coaching record of 54-47-14 (.530).
Follow Maryland Athletics on Twitter
Media Information
Email Straight To You: If you would like the latest Maryland women's soccer news emailed directly to you as soon as it breaks, email women's soccer contact Patrick Fischer with "Women's Soccer E-Mail" as the subject and you will receive every update.
Terps on the Web: For up-to-date game stories, statistics, schedules and results, and other Maryland athletic department information, please log-on to www.umterps.com on the Internet.
GameTracker: Follow Terps games live in 2010 on your computer with GameTracker. Links for all games that will be available can be found at www.umterps.com.