The Milwaukee women's soccer team closes out the month of September by diving back into Horizon League action, taking on Green Bay and Wright State this week. Up first is the Phoenix, making the trip up I-43 Wednesday. The team is then back at home Saturday, scheduled as the first game of the day in an MKE women's/men's doubleheader at Engelmann Stadium when they welcome the Raiders.
The midweek tilt at GB will have a live stream on ESPN+ and is set to start at 7 p.m. Saturday's matchup with WSU is a matinee, scheduled for a start time of 2 p.m. That contest will also be streamed live on ESPN+ with
Matt Menzl on the call. Both games will have live statistics available and all links can be found on the MKE website.
Saturday, it's "National Coffee Day" which means anyone that brings a coffee receipt from Collective, Stone Creek or the Grind will get $1 admission into Engelmann Stadium that afternoon.
The Panthers carry an all-time record of 26-7-2 into the game against the Phoenix, playing them to a 0-0 draw last season. A Milwaukee loss in 2014 snapped what was an 11-game win streak for MKE in the series. Recent history has been smiling on the Panthers fortunes, posting a 17-2-1 mark over the past 20 games between the two schools (dating back to 2004).
The ledger against Wright State reads 25-9-6 in MKE's favor, riding a three-game win streak in the series into play Saturday (also a five-game unbeaten streak at 4-0-1). Last fall the Panthers earned hard-fought 2-1 victories in both the regular season and in the postseason (double-OT in the tournament).
LOOKING AT THE OPPONENTS:
GREEN BAY: The Phoenix are coming off a 4-11-1 record in 2017, with the team going 3-5-1 in conference action. This season, GB was picked 10th in the preseason poll. Wojtek Krakowiak was named interim head coach in late July and enters his second season with the Phoenix in 2018. Krakowiak served as the assistant coach of the women's soccer program in 2017.
The squad in 2-8-0 so far this fall, which includes an 0-2 mark through the first two Horizon League games. However, both of those contests were one-goal defeats, with the Phoenix taking Wright State to overtime in its last outing. McKayla Kertscher (9 points on 3G/3A) and Alycia Wright (7 points on 3G/1A) lead the offense. Three players have seen time in goal, with Courtney Klatt the majority of it. She has posted a .782 save percentage and 1.98 goals-against average.
WRIGHT STATE: The Raiders went 12-8-0 in 2017, including 6-3 in league play before getting knocked out of the Horizon League Tournament in overtime of the semifinals. The 12 victories marked the program's most wins since 2007, while five members of the team received postseason honors.
So far this fall, WSU is 3-5-1, but have seemingly peaked at the right time, starting conference play at 2-0 with wins over Oakland (1-0 Sept. 14) and Green Bay (2-1 in OT Sept. 22). The offense has struggled to find the back of the net, however, scoring just seven goals through the first nine games. Aaliyah Patten leads the way there with six points (2G/2A) and 29 shots (next-highest is nine). In net, Maddie Jewell has played every minute, posting a .648 save percentage and 2.02 goals-against average.
ALL GOOD THINGS MUST COME TO AN END
Milwaukee saw its league and school record unbeaten streak come to an end at 27 games (23-0-4) following a tough 1-0 loss on Sept. 17. That more than doubled-up the former overall school record of 13, a mark set on three different occasions. Most recently it was the end of the 2015 season (7-0-3 to end the campaign, including a season-ending 1-1 draw against Wright State in the league semifinals), stretching into 2016 (another 2-0-1 for a 9-0-4 overall mark in the span). Those three marks included:
1. 23-0-4 (2017 into 2018)
2. 9-0-4 (end of 2015/start of 2016)
3. 12-0-1 (2006)
4. 10-0-3 (2005)
The team also broke the conference record of 24, set in 1994 when Notre Dame was part of the league and went 23-1-1, losing only in the NCAA Championship that fall. The mark finds a place in the history books as well, going down as the 12th-longest unbeaten streak in NCAA history. No. 1 on that list? A whopping 103 in a row by North Carolina, which was followed up by a streak of 101 more by the Tarheels the very next week in the late 1980's and early 1990's.
An in-depth look at the streak - which lasted 681 days - showed the following:
**Went 31 games unbeaten in regular-season play (28-0-3)
**Went 15 games unbeaten on the road (14-0-1)
**19 games unbeaten at home in regular-season play (17-0-2/still active)
BIG-TIME SWENSON STUFF
Kelli Swenson was announced as a candidate for the 2018 Senior CLASS Award® in NCAA Division I soccer Sept. 19. An acronym for Celebrating Loyalty and Achievement for Staying in School, the Senior CLASS Award focuses on the total student-athlete and encourages students to use their platform in athletics to make a positive impact as leaders in their communities. Swenson is one of just 30 final candidates on the women's side and the only member of the Horizon League on the list.
AHEAD OF THE CURVE
Milwaukee has still played the fewest games in the Horizon League ... yet still paces the offensive and defensive leaderboards in nearly all categories. Seven of the 10 league schools have played at least 10 games (three have played 10), yet the Panthers still lead the way in just nine games in points with 65 (second has 50), goals with 20 (second is 17) and assists with 25 (second with 20). In addition, the individual scoring list remains littered with Panthers as well.
Haley Johnson continues to lead the league with 13 (4G/5A) points.
Erin Corrigan (2G/7A) is now second with 11 and
McKaela Schmelzer (4G/2A) is currently tied for third place with 10. Defensively, the squad leads the way in goals-against average (0.66/second is 0.88) and shutouts (5/3).
HER TURN
Playing defense makes it tougher to score goals ... and missing a season with an injury can easily compound that. So, it was thrilling to see
Erin Corrigan score the first goal of her MKE career in the win over Eastern Illinois Aug. 24. She netted the eventual game-winner on a free kick, perfectly placing the approximately 30-yard attempt into the corner of the net. She added another directly off a corner kick against Iowa State Sept. 9.
CLASS IS IN SESSION
Speaking of
Erin Corrigan, the senior defender has taken over some of the corner-kick duties this season and been amazing - with nearly every point she has recorded as a result of the CK chances. In addition to the goal she scored at Iowa State, six of her seven assists so far this season have come directly off corner opportunities - five on direct headers into the net.
THOSE YOUNG 'UNS
The youth movement for the Panthers has arrived and is quickly coming together. Freshman
Jelena Sever was named the Horizon League Offensive Player of the Week Sept. 10 after netting three goals - including both game-winners - for the Panthers. That just adds to the list ... sophomore
Mackenzie Schill and freshman
Elaina LaMacchia were selected as Horizon League Offensive and Defensive Player of the Week Sept. 4. Prior to this fall, the last time a Milwaukee freshmen claimed POW honors was in 2015. Sever marks the third one this year, joining LaMacchia and
Haley Johnson.
NOT TOO SHABBY
When it comes to Horizon League openers, the record is quite impressive all-time. Milwaukee has now gone 22-2-1 in opening action (since joining the league in 1994), with a string of 14 wins in a row from 1998 through 2011. The squad has victories in each of the past six as well, following a 1-0 win at YSU.
The Panthers have had a very long line of success when it comes to Horizon League play, claiming the regular-season title in each of the past three seasons as well as 17 of the past 18 titles overall. In fact, under the watch of
Troy Fabiano, the team went a sparkling 23-1-3 over the past three campaigns in regular-season conference play.
PUT 'EM ON THE BALLOT
With the seven-game unbeaten start to the campaign, the Panthers continued to move up the United Soccer Coaches North Region Poll. The Week 5 version came out Sept. 18 and saw Milwaukee again check in at No. 4, up two spots from the week prior. The team also picked up nine votes in the national Top 25 poll in Week 4 before seeing six national votes in Week 5.
ALL HAIL THE NEW KID
Milwaukee freshman
Haley Johnson did not wait long to make a great first impression, earning Nike Horizon League Offensive Player of the Week honors following her first collegiate contest. In the 3-0 win over Northern Illinois, Johnson assisted the game-winner in the 11th minute before striking for a goal of her own in the 16th minute. The last freshmen to earn league player of the week honors were
Lourdes Onwuemeka in September of 2015 and Paige Lincicum at the end of the 2013 campaign. Johnson is the first MKE frosh to score in an opener since Sara Zawacki did so in 2012 and just the sixth newcomer to find the back of the net in the season opener all-time.
HOLD THE PHONE
Not to be outdone, classmate
Elaina LaMacchia also achieved some lofty status, becoming just the fifth Milwaukee freshmen to record a shutout in her first collegiate start when she recorded three saves for the clean sheet against NIU. It was the first shutout for a freshmen in an opener since Jamie Forbes set a school record with four in a row to open the 2009 campaign. It also marked the fourth season in a row that the Panthers held their opponents out of the net (2017: 0-0 vs. Akron/2016: 1-0 over Akron/2015: 1-0 over Western Illinois).
FOR OPENERS
The Panthers opened the season at Engelmann Stadium with a 3-0 win over Northern Illinois to improve to an all-time record of 12-14-3 in season openers at the NCAA Division I level and a tally of 16-11-2 in home openers. The team has gone 3-2-2 in season openers the past seven years, with a 1-0 victory over Western Illinois in
Troy Fabiano's debut in 2015 snapping a three-game stretch without a victory (Fabiano himself is now 3-0-1). A season ago, MKE opened the campaign with a 0-0 double-OT draw at Akron.
EXHIBITION SEASON REWIND
Milwaukee played a pair of exhibition contests this year, recording shutout victories against Loyola Chicago (3-0 August 7 against a team picked as the favorite in the Missouri Valley Conference's Preseason Coaches Poll) and Northern Iowa (1-0 August 11). The 0.00 GAA goalkeeping was split evenly between
Olivia Davies and
Allie Strottman, while the four goals were all scored by newcomers (freshman
Haley Johnson, freshman
Jelena Sever twice and junior
Chandler McDaniel).
LOOKING BACK ON AN UNPRECEDENTED ACCOMPLISHMENT
After having gone 16-0-4 in 2017 and finishing the season as the lone unbeaten team in the nation, a look back at some of the accomplishments is quite impressive:
*No. 2 in the nation in goals-against average at 0.285 (Rutgers was No. 1 at 0.267)
*No. 2 in the nation in total assists with 61
*No. 2 in the nation in assists-per-game
*No. 3 in the nation with 19.8 shots-per-game
*No. 3 in the nation in save percentage at .908
*No. 3 in the nation in W-L-T percentage at .900
*No. 6 in the nation in total points with 151
Milwaukee became the first Horizon League team to ever finish a full season without a loss. The other close calls it topped were both by Notre Dame: the 1994 season (23-1-1) and the 1993 campaign (19-2-0).
INTERNET HYPE
The women's college soccer blog AllWhiteKit.com picked the Panthers to win the 2018 Horizon League title. The conference preview article labeled
Lourdes Onwuemeka as "one of the league's breakout players last season" and "vital in keeping the Panthers scoring after netting six goals and nine assists last year". It goes on to target midfielder
McKaela Schmelzer as a "vital figure this year after a solid sophomore season with six goals and six assists". Other observations included "a bigger role for last year's super sub du jour,
Mackenzie Schill, as the sophomore started zero games but scored seven goals" and "a big wild card could be Fort Wayne transfer
Jessica Schoenfeldt, who was something of a big fish in a tiny pond in 2017 but who could be a big part in ensuring the Panthers don't skip a beat in 2018".
NATIONAL PRESEASON PUB
When the United Soccer Coaches Preseason Poll came out in early August, Milwaukee saw itself receiving votes. That marked just the second time in program history for that accomplishment in the preseason, along with the initial poll of 2012. That poll followed a 2011 campaign where the squad finished 19-3-0 and No. 23 in the country. Milwaukee spent the bulk of the 2011 season ranked, cracking the Top-10 in the NSCAA poll for the first time ever, peaking at No. 9 in the Soccer America rankings.
TOP BILLING BY TOP DRAWER SOCCER
The Top Drawer Soccer website released its 2018 Horizon League preview and had this to say about who they thought was the top choice: "Last year's regular season crown marked the third straight year Milwaukee ruled the campaign, and it's certain that they enter the new season as the team to beat". They also listed
Lourdes Onwuemeka and
Kelli Swenson as "Key Players to Watch". In addition, Swenson was ranked No. 75 on the website's "Women's DI Top 100 Players to Watch".
PRESEASON POLL
Horizon League champions for a third season in a row after claiming a 17th regular-season title in the past 18 years last fall, the Milwaukee women's soccer team was picked by league coaches to again take first in the Horizon League regular season. The Panthers tallied five first-place votes and 87 points in the coaches' poll to claim the No. 1 spot.
2018 PRESEASON POLL
1. Milwaukee – 87 (5 first-place votes)
2. IUPUI – 80 (3)
3. Wright State – 72 (1)
4. Northern Kentucky – 69 (1)
5. Cleveland State – 66
6. UIC – 57
7. Oakland – 40
8. Detroit Mercy – 37
9. Youngstown State – 24
10. Green Bay – 18
SETTING THE TONE
Milwaukee was in control in nearly every game last season, scoring first (and early) on a regular basis. In fact, the Panthers went 14-0-0 when scoring first last year, 17-0-1 once they netted a second goal and 13-0-3 when outshooting the opponent.
The Panthers trailed for less than 15 total minutes (13:12) the entire regular season. After a comeback was needed in the semifinals of the postseason against Wright State, that number ended up at just 56:40. Based on 1,893:32 of total minutes on the overall campaign, that means that MKE trailed for just 2.9 percent of the total time (They were tied at 0-0 for a cumulative total of 757:07). WSU also became the first team to be ahead of Milwaukee on the scoreboard and it finally came in game No. 13. That 1-0 deficit lasted all of 50 seconds that day before it was tied again.
SETTING THE BAR HIGH
Not only has
Troy Fabiano picked up his third Horizon League Coach of the Year honors in his three seasons at the helm, but his 40 victories are easily the most wins over the first three years of any coach in program history. The win total easily outdistances the 34 recorded by Michael Moynihan over the course of his first three seasons (13 in 1997, 10 in 1998 and 11 in 1999).
GOOD UP AND DOWN
One look at the team statistics following the conclusion of the 2017 campaign sees Milwaukee at the top of nearly every category across the Horizon League, whether you are looking at offensive or defensive statistics - most by overwhelming margins.
The potent MKE offense led the conference in points with 151 (second was 99), goals with 45 (second was 33), assists with 61 (second was 35) and shots with 19.8 per contest (15.0 was runner-up). Defensively, it was Milwaukee again leading the way in goals-against average at 0.29 (second was 1.08), fewest goals allowed at 6 (20) and shutouts at 14 (11).
WELCOME TO MILWAUKEE
There will once again be plenty of chances for newcomers to make an impression in 2018. A season ago, 11 of the 30 players on the roster were making their MKE debuts. This year, 17 of the 32 student-athletes will be appearing in a Panther uniform for the first time (12 true freshmen and a trio of redshirt freshmen in addition to two transfers). Newcomers earned 18 total starts last campaign, with
Taylor Tabbert accounting for all of them on her way to earning Horizon League All-Freshman Team honors.
Mackenzie Schill joined her on the all-freshman team after appearing in all 20 games off the bench.
WELL-REPRESENTED
The Panthers had eight different players earn postseason honors. Highlighting the way was a program-best five first-team honorees,
Kelli Swenson earning Defensive Player of the Year and
Troy Fabiano being named the Horizon League Coach of the Year for the third year in a row. The First-Team All-League members included a pair of second-time honorees in
Anna Smalley and
Cassidy Blanchard as well as
Aubrey Krahn,
Lourdes Onwuemeka and Swenson as first-time honorees.
Mallory Geurts joined her teammates with second-team accolades and both
Taylor Tabbert and
Mackenzie Schill round out the list with an appearance on the Horizon League All-Freshman Team.
GEURTS CLAMPED DOWN ON "D"
The season record for shutouts had stood at 13, a mark that Erin Kane established in 2005 and tied again in 2006.
Mallory Geurts posted a shutout in the league title game to finish at 14 for a new school and Horizon League mark.
1. Geurts, 14 (2017)
2. Kane, 13 (2005 and 2006)
4. Jamie Forbes, 11 (2011)
5. Erin Kane, 10 (2007)
RANKINGS RISE IN 2017
With each passing week, the Panthers continued to make noise in the regional - and national - polls a year ago. The team started the 2017 season ranked No. 15 in the United Soccer Coaches Great Lakes Regional Poll. They moved to No. 12, No. 9, again at No. 9 (Week 4), then up to No. 6 (Week 5), then again holding steady there in Week 6. National votes for the Top 25 started to appear Week 4 (2), bumping up again in Week 5 (5) and again in Week 6 (11). Week 7 saw the Panthers at No. 9 in the region and with five votes in the national poll, while Week 8 sees a regional rise to No. 8 in addition to four national poll votes. Week 9 saw another rise, landing at No. 7 in the region to go along with 10 national votes. Again the bar was raised in Week 10, moving to sixth in the region and to 13 national votes, essentially sitting at No. 28 in the country.
RANKING RUNDOWN
Milwaukee topped Marquette, 2-1, September 17 last year to claim a win over a nationally-ranked opponent. The Golden Eagles came in at No. 19 and with an eight-game unbeaten streak of their own before MKE claimed the big victory. That marked the first defeat of a ranked opponent since knocking off then-No. 16 Missouri, 1-0, back on September 17, 2006 – 11 years to the date (Milwaukee had been 0-15-3 since and is now 3-33-6 all-time).
THIS GUY IS FAB-ULOUS
Troy Fabiano was named the eighth head coach in program history in early 2015 and brought with him a very impressive resume. In his 17 years at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Fabiano went 222-74-29, a winning percentage of over 75 percent. Fabiano guided Parkside to 16 consecutive winning seasons, eight NCAA Tournament appearances and five Great Lakes Valley Conference championships. He earned three GLVC Coach of the Year awards, and was named the Midwest Region Coach of the Year in 2008, 2010 and 2014. In his last season of 2014, the squad went 18-1-3 and earned a berth in the NCAA Sweet 16 before falling to the eventual national champion in overtime.
CATCH THEM ANYWHERE
Milwaukee women's soccer will be readily available for the viewing pleasure of MKE fans this season, as all but one home game (and nearly all conference road games) will be streamed live on ESPN+. The Horizon League and ESPN have an agreement that includes ESPN hosting the league's digital network on the ESPN+ platform.
ESPN+, which will host the Horizon League women's soccer, men's soccer and volleyball championships this fall, offers fans thousands of live events, on-demand content and original programming not available on ESPN's linear TV or digital networks. Fans can subscribe to ESPN+ for just $4.99 a month (or $49.99 per year) and cancel at any time. Launched in April of 2018, ESPN+ is an integrated part of a completely redesigned ESPN App.
ON TAP
The month of October opens with a week that features just one game, a road trip to Michigan to take on Detroit Mercy Saturday.
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