The Milwaukee men's soccer team will play St. Francis College Brooklyn Thursday in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The postseason contest will take place April 29 in Wilmington, North Carolina. Kickoff is set for 5 p.m. CST.
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The Panthers (8-4) – winners of the Horizon League's automatic bid – will be taking on the Terriers (5-1-2) for the first time in program history after they claimed the automatic bid from the Northeast Conference, advancing by a final score of 6-5 in a penalty-kick shootout following a 0-0 draw with LIU. Each team will enter play ranked in its respective United Soccer Coaches regional poll, with the Panthers up to No. 4 in the North region (as well as receiving votes in the College Soccer News and Top Drawer Soccer national polls) and the Terriers No. 3 in the Northeast region.
See page 12 of this release for the complete bracket of the tournament. Thursday's affair will have a live stream as well as live statistics available. Check out the Milwaukee website for all links.
SCOUTING THE OPPONENT:
ST. FRANCIS: The Terriers won their league-record ninth NEC Championship in program history as they defeated LIU, 6-5, in penalty kicks April 16 following a 0-0 draw in regulation. The Terriers secured the NEC's automatic bid to the NCAA College Cup where they will make their 10th appearance in the national tournament.
The Terriers claimed the 2020-21 NEC Championship behind a historic performance by NEC Goalkeeper of the Year Callum James. James found the back of the net in the penalty kick shootout and then went on to make three consecutive saves (two to save the game, one to clinch the decision) in rounds seven, eight, and nine.
The team finished 5-1-2, scoring nine goals overall while allowing just five (posting four shutouts). The only loss of the spring came in the season opener, a 2-1 defeat at Merrimack. The offense is led by Nicolas Molina (9 points on 3G/3A), with Ranchwy Saint Vil second (6 points on 2G/2A). James comes into the NCAA Tournament with a 0.68 goals-against average and a .800 save percentage.
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St. Francis captured its fifth NEC Championship in the last eight years and have won three of the last five conference championships.
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St. Francis enters the NCAA College Cup with a (3-8) all-time record in the Tournament. The Terriers last made the Tournament in 2017 when they played New York City foe Fordham. The Terriers fell to the Rams in the First Round of the 2017 College Cup, 3-2, in overtime.
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Coach Giovatto leads the Terriers to the NCAA Tournament for the fifth time in his career, which has tied Carlo Tramontozzi for the most appearances in the national tournament by a head coach.
-Information courtesy of sfcathletics.com.
UNCW Soccer Stadium will serve as host of the contest and will be operating under the COVID 19 guidelines set forth by the NCAA and State of North Carolina. Currently the stadium is operating at a max capacity of 280 (150 pass list). Tickets can be purchased by visiting www.seahawsports.com and clicking on the Ticket tab or by emailing sporstix@uncw.edu or via phone 910-962-3233.
Milwaukee is making its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2013 and 10th in the history of the program (1979, 1980, 1990, 2001-05, 2013). The Panthers claimed an automatic bid courtesy of their 1-0 victory over nationally-ranked (#22) Northern Kentucky in the Horizon League Tournament Championship Saturday. Milwaukee enters on a hot streak, winners of five in a row - including three by shutout – in which they have outscored the opponent by a combined total of 13-2 in the five-game stretch.
The 2020-21 campaign, which was postponed from the fall to this spring, was a shortened version seeing the Panthers play 10 Horizon League matches. Milwaukee closed out the 2019 campaign playing very well, posting a 6-1-4 record from October 1 on, while closing the season on an eight-game unbeaten streak (5-0-3), which included that 1-1 draw in the Horizon League Tournament Championship before falling in heartbreaking fashion in a penalty-kick shootout. The defense was tops in the Horizon League, posting a conference-best 1.00 goals-against average as well as eight shutouts.
NCAA TOURNAMENT HISTORY
Milwaukee holds a 4-8-1 record all-time in nine previous NCAA Tournament appearances. The Panthers are 4-5 in their last five NCAA Tournament berths, with most of those appearances coming over a four-year span of 2002-05. Thursday will mark the program's 10th NCAA Tournament appearance overall, tops among all Horizon League schools. Below is a rundown of UWM's NCAA Tournament appearances.
Year, Opponent, Site, Result
2013: #19 Wisconsin, Madison, Wis., L, 1-0
2005: #1 New Mexico, Albuquerque, N.M., T, 2-2 (2OT) - Fell, 5-3 on PK's
2005: Bradley, Peoria, Ill., W, 2-0
2004: #1 UC Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, Calif., L, 2-1, OT
2004: #20 San Francisco, San Francisco, Calif., W 3-2
2003: #5 Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind., L, 4-1
2003: Western Michigan, Milwaukee, Wis., W, 4-1
2002: #6 Creighton, Lincoln, Neb., L, 3-2
2002: Oakland, Milwaukee, Wis., W, 2-1
2001: UMKC, St. Louis, Mo., L, 2-1
1990: Indiana, Bloomington, Ind., L, 5-1
1980: Cleveland State, Milwaukee, L, 1-0
1979: Cleveland State, Cleveland, Ohio, L, 2-1
GREAT THINGS FOR GRATTON
Junior
Paolo Gratton has put together a breakout 2021 campaign, tied for the top spot in the Horizon League with 22 points (11G) and in first by himself with his 11 goals - a total that stands fourth in the NCAA this season. In netting his 10th goal against UIC in the semifinals, he became the first MKE player to reach double-figures in goals since Laurie Bell recorded 13 goals back in 2013. Gratton has also scored a goal in six consecutive games coming into play in the NCAA Tournament - a streak not seen since Antou Jallow found the back of the net in each of the final seven outings of 2002 (posting 14G/4A).
After scoring in the Horizon League Tournament Championship in the final game of 2019, Gratton carried that momentum into this campaign. He stayed strong on offense, establishing career-highs (by week 4) in all categories with his 22 points and 37 shot attempts. He put together a brilliant outing against Oakland March 12, netting two goals in a game for the first time as a Panther, with his brace giving MKE a 3-2 lead at the time.
He followed that up with another two-goal effort against IUPUI March 24, making it back-to-back multi-goal efforts - something that hadn't been done by a MKE MSOC player in 17 years. The last to accomplish the feat was Antou Jallow in 2004, when he netted a pair against Loyola Oct. 24 and followed it up with two more in a win over Marquette two days later. He's also the first Panther with two multi-goal efforts at any point in the same season since Declan Rodriguez in 2015 (2G vs. Evansville in August/2 vs. Northern Kentucky in November).
ALL IN THE FAMILY
A unique situation again took place this spring on the field for the Milwaukee men's soccer team.
Kris Kelderman was again the head coach for his son,
Jake Kelderman, for a fourth straight campaign (Jake redshirted in 2016).
A TRIO ON THE TOP SQUAD
Three members of the team were named First-Team All-Horizon League – highlighted by
Logan Farrington earning Horizon League Freshman of the Year honors – when the league office announced the all-league teams and specialty award winners. Farrington was joined on the first-team by
Paolo Gratton and
Jake Kelderman. Farrington also picked up a spot on the Horizon League All-Freshmen Team, where he was joined by fellow newcomer
Raul Medina. It's the first time MKE MSOC has had a trio of players on the first team since 2003. Farrington joins
Evan Conway (2016) as the only Panthers to be honored as league freshmen of the year.
MAKING GOOD THINGS HAPPEN IN THREE'S
Josh Kidder continues to bring his playmaking skills to the field game after game and April 5 against Robert Morris was no different. He finished the afternoon with three assists, setting up each of the first three strikes in the 4-0 victory. Kidder is the second Panther to record three assists in a game this season, joining
Raul Medina who accomplished the feat against IUPUI March 24 (after not having been done since Dale Weiler did so against Marquette in October 2004). The trio of helpers ties for fifth-best in a game in program history and gives him nine on the season, good for a career-high (he had seven as a freshman in 2019) and currently second in the Horizon League as well as fourth in the nation. He has a chance to become the first MKE player with 10 assists in a season since Craig Mallace had 10 in 2005.
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.
David Cox was the hero in 2021's version, netting the game-winner with 36 seconds left in regulations.
It happened again in 2018, 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. Eight of the past 10 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. Seven 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.
HE IS FARR-OUT
Logan Farrington notched a pair of goals for the second time this season against IUPUI March 24, adding another assist to help him earn Horizon League Offensive Player of the Week honors. He joins Gratton with the first pair of multi-goal matches in the same season since Declan Rodriguez in 2015. He is also the first Panther freshman to pick up HL weekly honors since goalkeeper
Freddy Lorenzen in August of 2017. He has been a terror to league defenses all season, leading the conference in both total shots (54) and shots in goal (22) heading into the postseason. His 14 points (5G/3A) leads all Horizon League freshmen on the scoring chart.
MEDINA MAGIC
Raul Medina has made a solid first impression with the Panthers, making 10 starts in his 11 appearances through the 12-game season, recording 12 points (3G/6A). He played the hero role in the overtime win at Detroit Mercy and converted a PK against Wright State that stood up as the game-winner. That made him the fourth player to record back-to-back game winners since
Kris Kelderman took over as head coach before the 2012 campaign. He joins
Evan Conway (2019 vs. Eastern Illinois and Valparaiso), Robbie Boyd (2013 vs. DePaul and IUPUI), and Laurie Bell (2012 vs. IUPUI and Eastern Illinois).
Medina also put his talent to work against IUPUI March 24, assisting three of the four goals in the 4-0 win. Medina's three assists tied for the fifth-most in a game in program history, marking the first time since 2004 that the feat was accomplished. That season, Dale Weiler notched three helpers against Marquette in late October, setting up each strike in a 3-1 victory.
POLLING PLACE
The United Soccer Coaches released their first set of national and regional polls for the spring 2021 slate March 2. Milwaukee had made a quick first impression, landing at No. 10 in the opening North Region poll.
CHIAPPA THE KEY
Nick Chiappa was named Horizon League Defensive Player of the Week Feb. 26 after his work in the 1-0 overtime victory over Detroit Mercy. He picked up the first league honor as a Panther after making four saves to record the clean sheet, the second of his career. One of his four saves came in the 90th minute to get the match to the extra session.
Raul Medina then came up big, scoring the golden goal in the 92nd minute.
DANDY DEBUT
Freshman
Logan Farrington made quite the first impression with his outing against Purdue Fort Wayne in the season opener. He scored twice, netting the first goal of the game at the 15:09 mark while also accounting for what stood up as the game-winner when he made it 3-0 at the 57:35 mark. The brace in the 3-2 victory marked a first for an MKE freshman in a season opener since Edison Crespo did the same in the 2010 opener. It also marked just the third time in program history the feat has been recorded (Dan Day actually had three back in 1984).
STEADY DOSE OF OFFENSE
Farrington did set some history while he played all 90 minutes against the Mastodons Feb. 4, as his nine shots are the most-ever for a Panther freshman debut outing. To compare to the other multi-goal debuts mentioned above, Crespo pulled off the task in stunning fashion, playing just 13 minutes and scoring in the 88th and 89th minutes (four total shots) of a 4-2 win to secure the "Milwaukee Cup" against Marquette.
Day's day in 1984 consisted of six shots and included an assist. Farrington finished just one shot away from what would have been the third double-figure shot outing since 2006.
Vuk Latinovich had 11 shot attempts against IUPUI in 2019, while Steve Sperl had 10 against Cleveland State in October of 2006.
FOR OPENERS
Milwaukee is now 26-17-5 all-time in season openers following a 3-2 victory over Purdue Fort Wayne to open the 2020 slate. Head coach
Kris Kelderman now has 10 season openers on his resume at the NCAA Division I collegiate level, going 9-1-0. In addition to the wins over Purdue Fort Wayne (2021), 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.
LEAGUE LIFTOFF
The Panthers are now 23-11-3 all-time in league openers in seasons in which they have been affiliated with a conference following the 3-2 victory at Purdue Fort Wayne this spring. Head coach
Kris Kelderman is 4-4-2 in his 10 seasons, with the team also knocking off Oakland in overtime, 1-0, three years ago.
VUK HEADED TO THE BIG APPLE
Vuk Latinovich was selected by New York City FC in the 2021 Major League Soccer SuperDraft. NYCFC selected the senior midfielder in the third round of the draft with the 71st overall pick.
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Latinovich was a two-time All-Horizon League honoree who earned First-Team All-League and Second Team United Soccer Coaches All-North Region accolades as a junior in 2019, missing what would have been his senior campaign when athletic events were cancelled due to COVID-19 in the fall. He becomes the fifth Milwaukee men's soccer player to be drafted by an MLS team and the first since Steve Bode was selected by the Chicago Fire in the fourth round of the 2008 Major League Soccer Draft. Antou Jallow (fourth round in 2005), Tighe Dombrowski (fifth round of 2004 draft) and Chad Dombrowski (fifth round in 2003) round out the distinguished list.
LEAN ON THE EXPERIENCE
The Panthers lost a handful of key players who were regular starters to graduation and other factors from the 2019 campaign, but do return four of their six student-athletes that earned league postseason honors. Set to return in 2021 is All-Horizon League Second Team member
Jake Kelderman, as well as Horizon League All-Freshman Team selections
Kasper Davidsson,
Josh Kidder and
Abdu Regassa.
Kelderman has been a three-year starter and will continue to anchor the MKE backline this season. He started all 20 games in 2019, netting a pair of goals on nine shots. Davidsson (16 starts in his 16 appearances), Kidder (12 starts in 20 games) and
Abdu Regassa (14 starts in 20 games) all played key roles as freshmen and will be looked at to provide leadership this spring.
HEATING UP
The Panthers picked the perfect time of the season to play their best soccer to end the 2019 campaign, posting a 6-1-4 record after the calendar turned to October. The defense led the way, allowing just eight goals in the stretch while posting six shutouts for a team goals-against average of 0.67. Milwaukee closed the season on an eight-game unbeaten streak (5-0-3), its best stretch since a 10-game unbeaten start (9-0-1) to the 2013 season.
GETTING TO TWO
The Milwaukee defense was stingy a season ago, producing eight shutouts which was good for second in the league. The team goals-against average of 1.00 was also good for the top spot. Offensively, once the team found a second goal, the Panthers were very tough to beat. The squad went 10-0-1 when scoring two or more goals. That brings the four-year tally (heading into the 2021 campaign) to 32-3-6 when finding the back of the net at least twice in a match.
THAT'S OFFENSIVE
The Panthers put up quite the offensive display against IUPUI in a 2-2 draw in October of 2019. 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.
KEEP FIRING
The team was in every game in 2019 and gave itself a very good opportunity on both sides of the ball, night-in and night-out. The Panthers averaged 13.95 shots per game and were third in the league with 293 total shots. The team also paced the conference in corner kicks with 123.
TOUGH DECISIONS
The Panthers were on the wrong side of some hard-luck decisions during the 2019 campaign, 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.
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 41-19-12 (.653) at home in
Kris Kelderman's eight-plus years as the head coach.
CATCH THEM IN ACTION
Milwaukee men's soccer will be available for the viewing pleasure of MKE fans this season, as all home games are scheduled to be streamed live on ESPN+ (subject to change due to weather and location). 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 season, 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 $5.99 a month (or $59.99 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 can top St. Francis Brooklyn, they will advance to the second round of the NCAA Tournament to take on Indiana. The game against the third-seeded Hoosiers is scheduled to take place May 2, also in Wilmington. Kickoff is set for 4 p.m. CST.
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