Vote for U.S. Soccer Awards

December 8, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Awards, College Soccer, Int'l Soccer, Pro Soccer, Soccer

U.S. Soccer has announced the finalists for the 2009 Best of U.S. Soccer awards and there’s only one week left to vote for the 12 categories  on USSoccer.com.

The eighth annual series gives fans the opportunity to make their selections for the best in soccer in the United States. The 12 categories recap a busy 2009 crammed full of action, which included FIFA World Cup qualifying, the FIFA Confederations Cup, Abby Wambach’s 100th goal, another Development Academy Season and the CONCACAF Gold Cup.

Female Athlete of the Year nominees include national team players Shannon Boxx (Sol), Heather O’Reilly, Christine Rampone (Sky Blue), Hope Solo (Athletica) and Abby Wambach (Freedom).

The Young Female Athletes of the Year are nominees Tobin Heath (UNC), Sydney Leroux (UCLA), Christine Nairn, Kelly O’Hara (Stanford) and Katie Schoepfer.

Fans can vote once a day from now until Sunday, Dec. 13, in the Community section of ussoccer.com. For certain categories, voters will be able to watch videos and view photos as they relive some of the best moments of 2009.

Go make your vote count.

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Women’s College Cup: True Blue

December 6, 2009 by admin  
Filed under College Soccer, Soccer

In a battle between the NCAA’s most storied program and an unbeaten Stanford squad, history won out, as North Carolina took a 1-0 win to claim its record 20th national title.

It was a heartbreaking outcome for Stanford (and after UCLA lost in the semis, I was definitely rooting for the other Cali team) but a deserved win for the Tar Heels nevertheless.

The Tar Heels (23-3-1) earned their sixth NCAA crown since 1999 and their  10th shutout in 11 games, holding the usually high-scoring Cardinal to nine shots. Going into this match, the Cardinal was the nation’s second-highest scoring team, with 80 goals this season, but the Tar Heels allowed only two shots on goal.

The players in the final game dealt with persistent rain and unseasonably cold weather. The temperature at kickoff was 48 degrees, up from the mid-30s for Friday night’s semifinals.

So, without further ado, here are the match highlights:

The Tar Heel’s Jessica McDonald scored in the third minute off a beautiful cross by Casey Nogueira. Nogueira fed a high, bending pass into the goal area, and McDonald rushed in to chip it past goalkeeper Kira Maker.

Stanford’s comeback hopes virtually ended in the second half when POY favorite Kelley O’Hara, the nation’s leading goal scorer, was issued her second yellow card — an automatic ejection — with 17:45 left in the game.

Short-handed Stanford was left to rely on second-leading scorer Christen Press, who nearly tied it with a 20-yard shot that North Carolina goalkeeper Ashlyn Harris leaped to punch away.

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