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2019 MSOC HLT

Men's Soccer Chris Zills

Men's Soccer Looks To Keep Strong Run Of Play Going Into Postseason

Panthers are 5-1-2 since October 1

The Milwaukee men's soccer team will begin the quest for its sixth Horizon League Tournament Championship and 10th NCAA Tournament appearance in program history Monday, traveling to Detroit Mercy in a postseason first-round matchup at Titan Stadium. The contest will get underway at 6 p.m. CST.

As the No. 6 seed, the Panthers battle the third-seeded Titans. Monday's other game pits #4 Green Bay against #5 Wright State. The Panthers entered the final day of the regular season on the outside looking in, but took matters in their own hands with a 3-2 victory over regular-season champion UIC at home. See page 9 of this release for the complete bracket of the tournament. Monday's affair will have an ESPN+ feed as well as live statistics. Check out the Milwaukee website for all links.

Winners from the two games Monday advance to the semifinals at UIC, where the top-seeded Flames and No. 2 seeded Oakland Golden Grizzlies await in the semifinals for games on Thursday.

Milwaukee holds an 18-9-5 mark all-time against the Titans, with just one loss on the ledger since the 2013 season (5-1-1 since then). A season ago, the Panthers claimed a 2-1 win at home, with Evan Conway breaking the 1-1 tie on Senior Night. They also won the regular-season matchup this fall, claiming a 1-0 victory with Conway playing hero again - this time scoring the only goal of the game at the 75:09 mark.

SCOUTING THE OPPONENTS:
DETROIT MERCY
: The Titans made a big jump this season, entering play 7-10-1 overall, but more impressively, putting together a 4-3-1 league ledger that earned them the No. 3 seed in the postseason. They are coming off a season in which they won just once, finishing 1-14-3 and 0-6-2 in Horizon League action. The Titans were picked to finish ninth in the 2019 Horizon League Preseason Poll.

Detroit Mercy enters its 10th year under head coach Nicholas Deren, who has guided the squad to over 60 victories and two regular-season titles in his tenure. The squad returned 18 letter winners and nine starters from last year's team, including eight of 10 players who scored goals. Ten newcomers -- nine freshmen and one transfer -- joined the roster.

The team leaned on the defense this season, with Devin Mendez posting a 1.52 goals-against average and a league-leading seven clean sheets. They have won three of their final four games of the regular season, closing with 1-0 victories over IUPUI Nov. 2 and Cleveland State Nov. 8. Just one player currently has double-figures in points, with Kyle Bandyk leading the way with 10 (4G/2A).

POSTSEASON UNDER KELDERMAN
Kris Kelderman has his team in the postseason for the seventh time in his eight years at the helm, including the title in a memorable 2013 postseason run. Overall, his team has gone 3-3-3 in the Horizon League Tournament. The last appearance was a tough shootout loss at Wright State a year ago following a 1-1 draw against a Raiders team that was ranked No. 18 in the country at the time.

The Panthers start the trek to what would be a 10th NCAA Tournament appearance (2013/2005/2004/2003/2002/2001/1990/1980/1979).

HEATING UP
The Panthers picked the perfect time of the season to be playing their best soccer, posting a 5-1-2 record since the calendar turned to October. The defense has led the way, allowing just seven goals in the stretch while posting four shutouts for a team goals-against average of 0.83. Evan Conway has led the offense in the span with 9 points (3G/3A), with Freddy Lorenzen posting a 0.94 GAA of his own.

CONGRATS SENIORS!
The three Milwaukee seniors wore their jerseys at home for the final time Nov. 8 against UIC. #3 Ben Krolczyk, #9 Evan Conway and #28 Josh Kaye were honored in pregame "Senior Night" festivities.

HENRIK THE HERO
Henrik Fennefoss picked an amazing time to record the first two-goal game of his Milwaukee career, helping the Panthers top UIC, 3-2, Nov. 8. His first was timely, leveling the contest at 1-1 just 32 seconds after the Flames had found the scoreboard first. He went on to net the eventual game-winner in the 59th minute, closing out a span of three goals in just 7:42 on the clock for the Panthers on the day.

HEADING TO THE TOP OF THE CHART
Freddy Lorenzen recorded his league-leading fifth shutout of the season with a three-save effort in a 0-0 draw against Oakland Nov. 2. Not only that, but the clean sheet gives him 18 for his collegiate career, just three away from Chris Dadaian's (1999-2002) school record of 21.

Lorenzen currently sits tied for third with Jon Mroz (1988-91) at 18. P.J. Johns (1978-80) is second with 19 shutouts.

CALL IT THREE FOR TWO?
Evan Conway was named the Nike Horizon League Offensive Player of the Week Oct. 21, the third time in his MKE career. He had a brilliant week, leading the Panthers to back-to-back 2-0 victories over Eastern Illinois Oct. 15 and Valparaiso Oct. 19. He had the game-winning goal in each outing, launching 11 shots, seven of which were on goal.
 
He scored the opener against EIU and followed that up with a brace against Valpo, the third time in his career he has posted a two-goal performance. The other times: against Wright State in 2017 (which included 95' OT winner) and versus Marquette in 2016.

THAT'S OFFENSIVE
The Panthers put up quite the offensive display against IUPUI in a 2-2 draw Oct. 5. The team ran up 34 total shots in symmetrical fashion, firing off 13 in each half and four apiece in each overtime period. The 34 shot attempts marked the most since equaling that total with 34 against Green Bay back in October of 2012.

Vuk Latinovich had an eye-popping 11 shot attempts of his own, nearly coming up with the golden goal on the final one at the buzzer. That marked the first time a Panther recorded 10-or-more shots in a single game since Steve Sperl had 10 against Cleveland State in October of 2006.

KEEP FIRING
The team has been in every game and continues to give itself a very good opportunity on both sides of the ball, night-in and night-out. The Panthers average 14.3 shots per game and are fourth in the league with 258 total shots. The team also continues to pace the conference in corner kicks, starting the week at 109 (UIC moved one ahead of them last week at 110).

TOUGH DECISIONS
The Panthers have been on the wrong side of some hard-luck decisions this fall, with four of the six losses coming as one-goal setbacks and the Green Bay game essentially getting decided in the final minutes. Included in those four results are a pair of overtime losses (one on a PK), as well as a 2-1 loss on a 72nd-minute penalty kick.

CONWAY'S CAMPAIGN
Senior Evan Conway has been a three-year starter for the Panthers, making 55 starts in 57 career games coming into the 2019 campaign. The all-league honoree brought a resume into play this fall that included 21 goals, 12 assists, 54 points and 153 shots. With a similar final year stats-wise in a Milwaukee uniform, he could find his way into the record book for career Top 10 in all four of those categories. The current No. 10 spot in all of those categories looks like this:
Goals: 28 (Jake Provan, 1992-95) / Conway now at 26
Assists: 19 (three-way tie)  / now at 16
Points: 72 (Fabio Marras, 1980-83) / now at 68
Shots: 177 (Gerard Lagos, 1988-91) / now at 205

GIVE ME "SHOTS FOR 200 ALEX"
Evan Conway entered the Top 10 for career shots against Cleveland State Sept. 28 when he sent No. 178 on goal. He recently went over 200 for his career (now 205), becoming the sixth player in program history to accomplish it. He passed Ryan Seymour (7th at 196) and Manuel Lagos (6th at 198) in most recent action, with Mike Rowe (214) up next. Leading the way is the school-record total of 279, set by Pete Knezic back in 1977-80.

THE BATTLE FOR THE MILWAUKEE CUP
Milwaukee and Marquette play for the "Milwaukee Cup", one of the longest-standing rivalries in all of college soccer. In the summer of 2011, the College Soccer News website published a list of what they called "The Fourteen Greatest Rivalries in College Soccer." Weighing in at No. 10 on their list was the Milwaukee Cup. The Panthers certainly have the upper hand all-time, now holding a 31-11-5 record in the series after retaining possession of the Cup home with a 2-1 victory Sept. 17. MKE is now 3-0-2 over the last five meetings.

The 2012 matchup remains one for the memory books, as the Golden Eagles, trailing the Panthers 2-1 with less than 10 minutes remaining in the contest, pulled off a stunning finish to grab possession of the Cup. Following a goalkeeper miscue, Marquette found the equalizer at the 81:53 mark and then won the contest at the buzzer as the winning goal crossed the line at the 89:59 mark before the horn sounded. The 2013 edition was just as exciting, with the Panthers scoring just 60 seconds into the affair en route to a 2-1 victory over a Marquette squad that was ranked No. 12 at the time.

PART OF HISTORY
The Panthers and all of the fans jam-packed into Engelmann Stadium for the 'Milwaukee Cup' matchup against Marquette Sept. 3, 2015 became part of history. The 4,030 in attendance not only blew away the old facility record of 3,312 (set in the 2013 'Milwaukee Cup'), but was also the largest crowd to ever watch a collegiate men's soccer game in the history of the state of Wisconsin. Milwaukee now holds the top four spots on the list.

4,030 - Sept. 3, 2015 - Milwaukee 1, Marquette 1 (MKE CUP)
3,312 - Aug. 30, 2013 - Milwaukee 2, Marquette 1 (MKE CUP)
3,256 - Sept. 13, 2006 - Milwaukee 3, Marquette 2 (MKE CUP)
3,000 - Nov. 22, 1980 - Cleveland State 1, Milwaukee 0
2,470 - Oct. 13, 1995 - Wisconsin 2, Indiana 0
2,250 - Sept. 3, 1990 - Milwaukee 0, Evansville 0
2,145 - Oct. 15, 1993 - Indiana 5, Wisconsin 1
2,138 - Oct. 1, 2003 - Wisconsin 1, Milwaukee 0

LEAGUE LIFTOFF
The Panthers are now 22-11-3 all-time in league openers in seasons in which they have been affiliated with a conference following the hard-fought 1-0 victory at Detroit Mercy Sept. 14. Head coach Kris Kelderman is 3-4-2 in his nine seasons, with the team also knocking off Oakland in overtime, 1-0, three seasons ago.

GETTING GOING
Freshman Matthew Cahill made a quality first impression with the Panthers, scoring twice in his first four games. His goal at the 2:57 mark against UAB Sept. 8 is also the quickest to open a game for Milwaukee since September of 2016. That day, Nick Moon found the back of the net in just 1:49 to jumpstart a 2-0 win over Bradley. The school record is only 19 seconds (B.J. Blake against Memphis in 2003).

FREDDY JOINING SOME FAST COMPANY
Freddy Lorenzen was named Horizon League Defensive Player of the Week Sept. 3 after going 2-0 to open the campaign, which included a five-save shutout of Drake Sept. 2 to mark the 14th clean sheet of his time in Milwaukee. It is also the sixth fifth time he has now won the honor in his career. Considering he's just embarking on the start of his junior season, he may have a crack at league history over his career. The conference record for most weekly awards is eight. With six on his resume, Lorenzen already stands in fourth place all-time.

1. Nathan Steinwascher, Detroit Mercy: 8
T2. Antou Jallow, Milwaukee: 7
T2. Eric Lukin, UIC: 7
4. Freddy Lorenzen, Milwaukee: 6
5. JC Banks, Green Bay: 5

SYKES DOUBLE-UP
Alex Sykes netted a pair of goals in the season opener against Western Illinois Aug. 30 and, with five points (2G/1A), is near the top of the Horizon League scoring race and well on his way to top the eight (3G/2A) he recorded a season ago. It continued a recent trend over the years, marking the fourth time since 2010 that a Panther scored twice in the season opener. The most recent to do it was Kostas Kotselas (2016), with the recent list including Declan Rodriguez (2015) and Edison Crespo (2010). The program record for the season opener remains a hat trick (3) by Dan Day in 1984.

EXHIBITION SEASON REWIND
Milwaukee played three exhibition contests this fall, posting a 2-1-0 mark as it topped Cardinal Stritch (2-0 Aug. 16) and Parkside (3-2 Aug. 23), while also dropping a tight one at Loyola Chicago (1-0 Aug. 20).

Vuk Latinovich paced the offense with a trio of goals (two against Parkside), recording five shots. Evan Conway had a goal, assist and three shots, while newcomer Matthew Cahill also scored and fired off five shot attempts. In net, freshman Nick Chiappa compiled 61:04 of scoreless play in two games, making two saves. Freddy Lorenzen saw 148-plus minutes of action, allowing two goals while making four saves.

NOW THIS IS HOME FIELD ADVANTAGE
When it comes to home field advantage, the Panthers have historically ranked right up there with the best in the business. From 2001 through 2006, Milwaukee turned Engelmann Stadium into a place visiting teams did not want to see on their schedule, going 49-8-2 in that time. After a few down seasons by MKE standards, the magic is getting brought back - the Panthers have compiled a record of 39-18-12 (.652) at home in Kris Kelderman's seven-plus years as the head coach.

WELCOME TO MILWAUKEE
There will be plenty of chances for newcomers to make an impression once again in 2019. A season ago, the Milwaukee squad was very young, with 12 of the 31 student-athletes appearing on a Panther uniform for the first time (nine true freshmen and two redshirt freshmen, as well as one transfer who sat out the prior season). This year, 10 of the 25 on the roster will be appearing in a Panther uniform for the first time (seven true freshmen, one redshirt freshmen, as well as a pair of transfers).

GETTING TO TWO
The Milwaukee defense was stingy a season ago, producing five shutouts which was good for third in the league. The team goals-against average of 1.10 was just off the top spot of 0.95 and also checked in at third. Offensively, once the team found a second goal, the Panthers were very tough to beat. Last fall, the squad went 6-1-0 when scoring two or more goals. That brings the three-year tally (heading into the 2019 campaign) to 22-3-5 when finding the back of the net at least twice in a match.

CHANCELLOR'S CUP DRAMA
The battle for the Chancellor's Cup has seen some thrillers over the years, but if it feels like the drama and intensity has been higher lately, you would be correct. It happened again last season, with Sean Holmes golden goal coming in the 99th minute. The year prior, MKE tied the game with just eight seconds remaining in regulation on a goal by Jonathan Stadler to force overtime before falling. And again in 2016, when Milwaukee reclaimed the Cup with a thrilling 1-0 victory Oct. 22 on a goal by Magnus Flaatedal.

Seven of the past nine occasions these two teams have now played, the game has gone into overtime (5 of 7 into double-overtime), with five of the seven ending in victories for one team or the other. Five years ago it was an own goal that won it for Green Bay, snapping Milwaukee's 10-game unbeaten streak (9-0-1) to start the 2013 season. The 2012 version ended in a draw but the 2011 edition provided one of the most memorable finishes to a game in program history, with Cody Banks netting the winner at the 109:53 mark.

FOR OPENERS
Milwaukee is now 25-17-5 all-time in season openers following a 3-2 victory over Western Illinois to open the 2019 slate. Head coach Kris Kelderman now has nine season openers on his resume at the NCAA Division I collegiate level, going 8-1-0. In addition to the wins over WIU (2017-2019), Eastern Illinois (2016), Evansville (2015), DePaul (2014) and a nationally-ranked Marquette squad (2013), his Green Bay squad topped SIU Edwardsville, 1-0, in 2011.

ALL IN THE FAMILY
A unique situation again takes place this fall on the field for the Milwaukee men's soccer team. Kris Kelderman will again be the head coach for his son, Jake, for a fourth straight campaign (Jake redshirted in 2016).

BRING ON THE CUP
The "Milwaukee Cup" is one of the three traveling trophies that the Panthers play for each and every season. In addition, Milwaukee takes on Green Bay for the "Chancellor's Cup" and also play Northern Illinois for the "LeWang Trophy". Back in 2011, Milwaukee posted wins in all three games (2-1 over Marquette; 3-2 in double-overtime against Green Bay and 1-0 against NIU) to hold all three trophies for the first time since the start of the 2005 campaign.

CATCH THEM ANYWHERE
Milwaukee men'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
If the Panthers win, they advance to the weekend in Chicago. If they can go on to claim the Horizon League Tournament Championship, they would advance on to the NCAA Tournament next week.
 
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Players Mentioned

Sean Holmes

#7 Sean Holmes

MF
5' 11"
Senior
Evan Conway

#9 Evan Conway

F
6' 1"
Senior
Henrik Fennefoss

#10 Henrik Fennefoss

MF/F
6' 0"
Junior
Josh Kaye

#28 Josh Kaye

D
6' 1"
Redshirt Senior
Ben Krolczyk

#3 Ben Krolczyk

D/MF
5' 11"
Senior
Vuk Latinovich

#6 Vuk Latinovich

MF
6' 1"
Junior
Freddy Lorenzen

#1 Freddy Lorenzen

GK
6' 1"
Junior
Alex Sykes

#15 Alex Sykes

F
5' 10"
Redshirt Junior
Matthew Cahill

#7 Matthew Cahill

F
6' 0"
Freshman
Nick Chiappa

#30 Nick Chiappa

GK
5' 8"
Freshman

Players Mentioned

Sean Holmes

#7 Sean Holmes

5' 11"
Senior
MF
Evan Conway

#9 Evan Conway

6' 1"
Senior
F
Henrik Fennefoss

#10 Henrik Fennefoss

6' 0"
Junior
MF/F
Josh Kaye

#28 Josh Kaye

6' 1"
Redshirt Senior
D
Ben Krolczyk

#3 Ben Krolczyk

5' 11"
Senior
D/MF
Vuk Latinovich

#6 Vuk Latinovich

6' 1"
Junior
MF
Freddy Lorenzen

#1 Freddy Lorenzen

6' 1"
Junior
GK
Alex Sykes

#15 Alex Sykes

5' 10"
Redshirt Junior
F
Matthew Cahill

#7 Matthew Cahill

6' 0"
Freshman
F
Nick Chiappa

#30 Nick Chiappa

5' 8"
Freshman
GK