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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Road to the final  



1.1  Georgetown  





1.2  Virginia  







2 Pre-match  



2.1  Venue selection  







3 Match  



3.1  Details  





3.2  Statistics  







4 References  














2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer championship game







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2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer championship game
WakeMed Soccer Park hosted the final
Event2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament
Georgetown won 7–6 on penalties.
DateDecember 15, 2019
VenueWakeMed Soccer Park, Cary, North Carolina, U.S.
Man of the MatchDylan Nealis
RefereeRubiel Vazquez
Attendance8,413
WeatherClear and 54 °F (12 °C)

2018

2020

The 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer championship game (also known as the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's College Cup) was played on December 15, 2019, at WakeMed Soccer ParkinCary, North Carolina and determined the winner of the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, the national collegiate soccer championship in the United States. This was the 61st edition of the oldest active competitioninUnited States college soccer.

The match featured Georgetown University of the Big East Conference, and the University of Virginia of the Atlantic Coast Conference. It was the first time in NCAA Tournament history that the final featured two programs from the Washington, D.C. metro area. This was also the highest scoring national final since 1980.

Road to the final[edit]

The NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, sometimes known as the College Cup, is an American intercollegiate soccer tournament conducted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), and determines the Division I men's national champion. The tournament has been formally held since 1959, when it was an eight-team tournament. Since then, the tournament has expanded to 48 teams, in which every Division I conference tournament champion is allocated a berth. It was Georgetowns's first appearance since 2012, which they lost their sole NCAA final appearance against Indiana, and Virginia's first appearance since 2014, where they defeated UCLA. Virginia has won the NCAA Tournament on seven previous occasions: 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 2009, and 2014.

Virginia (ACC) Round Georgetown (Big East)
Opponent Result Conference Tournament Opponent Result
Syracuse 2–1 (H) Quarterfinals Bye
Wake Forest 1–0 (N) Semifinals Butler 2–2 (H)
Clemson 3–1 (N) Championship Providence 3–1 (H)
Opponent Result NCAA Tournament Opponent Result
Bye First Round Bye
Campbell (Big South) 2–0 (H) Second Round Pitt (ACC) 5–0 (H)
St. John's (Big East) 3–0 (H) Third Round (Sweet 16) Louisville (ACC) 5–1 (H)
SMU (American) 3–2 (H) Quarterfinals (Elite 8) Washington (Pac-12) 2–1 (H)
Wake Forest (ACC) 2–1 (N) College Cup (Final 4) Stanford (Pac-12) 2–0 (N)

Georgetown[edit]

Georgetown University was making their second appearance in the College Cup final, having previously reached the final in 2012, where they lost to Indiana. On November 17, the program qualified for the NCAA Tournament by winning the 2019 Big East Conference Men's Soccer Tournament, 3–1 over Providence, claiming the conference's automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament. It was the Hoyas' third consecutive Big East Tournament title, and their fourth overall. Georgetown had also won the Big East regular season championship, giving the Hoyas their second consecutive Big East regular season title, and their seventh overall. Entering the national championship game, Georgetown accumulated a record of 19–1–3 across all competitions, and a 7–0–2 record in Big East play. Jacob Montes led the Hoyas will 11 goals during the season, and Derek Dodson led the Hoyas with eight 8 assists and 26 points during the season.

Entering the NCAA Tournament, Georgetown was ranked second overall in the United Soccer Coaches poll, and were given the third overall seed, allowing them to earn a bye into the second round of the tournament. On November 24, in the second round, Georgetown hosted ACC outfit, Pitt, who were making their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1965. Two goals from Dylan Nealis, strikes from Foster McCune and Dodson, along with an own goal from Pitt, gave the Hoyas a 5–0 victory over Pitt, their largest margin of victory all season. Louisville upset the 14th seeded UC Davis in the second round, giving Georgetown a third round (Sweet 16) matchup with another ACC outfit: Louisville Cardinals. On December 1, Georgetown defeated Louisville. Georgetown once again scored five goals in the match, giving the Hoyas a 5–1 victory over Louisville. Paul Rothrock and Montes each scored twice, and Jack Beer added an additional goal for the Hoyas. Louisville's Pedro Fonseca scored the team's only goal against Georgetown.

On December 7, in the Quarterfinals (Elite 8), Georgetown hosted the Pac-12 champions, and the 6th-seeded, Washington Huskies. The Huskies raced out to a quick lead, thanks to a Jaret Townsend strike in the fourth minute, causing Georgetown to be trailing for the first time throughout the tournament. Midway through the second half, Montes and Dodson each scored quick succession goals to give the Hoyas a 2–1 lead, which proved to be the final score, and allowed Georgetown to book their trip to the College Cup (Final 4) for the first time since 2012.

On December 13, the College Cup semifinal round was held. The Semifinals were played at the neutral site WakeMed Soccer ParkinCary, North Carolina, where Georgetown played against the seventh-seeded Stanford. Stanford had won the NCAA College Cup thrice between 2015 and 2017 before exiting in the quarterfinals in 2018, and were making their seventh College Cup appearance, their fourth in the last five years. In cold and wet conditions, Georgetown prevailed 2–0 over Stanford. Sean Zawadzki opened the scoring for the Hoyas in the fourth minute of play, and McCune scored the insurance goal for Georgetown in the 67th minute.

Virginia[edit]

The University of Virginia was making their ninth appearance in the national championship. Of the previous eight finals, Virginia had won seven of the finals, with their last loss in a national championship coming in 1997. Virginia booked their record 39th consecutive appearance in the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament on November 17, with a 3–1 against Clemsoninthe ACC Men's Soccer Championship Game.[1] It was Virginia's first ACC Men's Soccer Tournament title since 2009, and their 11th overall ACC Tournament championship.[2] Additionally, Virginia had won their first regular season championship since 2010, accumulating a conference record of 6–1–1.[2] The regular season title was Virginia's 19th overall ACC Regular Season championship.[2] Entering the national championship game, Virginia had a record of 21–1–1. Daryl Dike led Virginia during the 2019 in both goals and assists, notching nine goals and eight total assists.[3]

Entering the NCAA Tournament, Virginia was ranked atop all major collegiate soccer polls (United Soccer, TopDrawer Soccer, SBI, and College Soccer News). Virginia also earned the number one overall seed in the NCAA Tournament, allowing them to earn a bye to the second round proper of the tournament. The Cavaliers first NCAA Tournament game came on November 24, where they hosted the Big South Conference champions, Campbell. Virginia won the game 2–0 thanks to a 38th-minute goal by Spencer Patton and an 85th-minute goal by Nathaniel Crofts. The Cavaliers hosted the sixteenth-seeded, and Big East semifinalists, St. John's in the third round (Sweet Sixteen) on November 30.[4] Three first half goals by the Cavaliers proved to be the difference in the match.[4] Andreas Ueland netted two early goals in the 4th and 15th minutes of play, before Joe Bell notched the final goal of the match in the 37th minute.[5][6]

The following week, on December 6, Virginia hosted the American Athletic Conference champions, and 8th-seeded, SMU.[7] In a five-goal match, Virginia prevailed on a golden goal to win 3–2.[8] Virginia's Axel Gunnarson opened the scoring in the 18th minute, before SMU's Gabriel Costa tied the match in the 71st minute.[8] Bell would score the goal-ahead goal for the Cavaliers in the 78th minute before the Mustangs tied the game again in the 84th minute,[9] thanks to a header by Henrik Bredeli.[8] In the 95th minute, Bell scored the match-winning goal, sending Virginia to the College Cup for the 13th time in program history, and for the first time since 2014.[9]

On December 13, Virginia played fellow ACC outfit, Wake Forest in the College Cup Semifinals,[9] which was the second match of a doubleheader at WakeMed Soccer Park.[10] In front of a crowd of 9,862, Virginia's Daryl Dike scored two first half goals,[11] in the 19th and 23rd minutes, to give Virginia an early 2–0 lead over the Demon Deacons.[12] Wake Forest captain, Bruno Lapa, scored a late goal for the Demon Deacons in the 79th minute,[12] but the Cavaliers defense would prevail, to send Virginia to the national championship.[13]

Pre-match[edit]

Venue selection[edit]

The National Collegiate Athletic Association determined the host of the final on April 18, 2017. The announcement of WakeMed Soccer Park was in conjunction with Meredith Field at Harder Stadium being announced as the 2018 and 2020 College Cup venue, while WakeMed would host the College Cup again in 2021.[14]

Match[edit]

Details[edit]

6:00 PM EST
Virginia3–3 (a.e.t.)Georgetown
  • Bell 10'
  • Steedman 58'
  • Dike 86'
  • Report
  • Wu 22'
  • Dodson 81'
  • Penalties
  • Steedman soccer ball with check mark
  • Donasiyano soccer ball with check mark
  • Ueland soccer ball with check mark
  • Crofts soccer ball with check mark
  • Halsey soccer ball with check mark
  • Gunnarsson soccer ball with red X
  • 6–7
  • soccer ball with check mark Riviere
  • soccer ball with check mark Beer
  • soccer ball with check mark Polvara
  • soccer ball with check mark Fischer
  • soccer ball with check mark Wu
  • soccer ball with check mark Rocha
  • Attendance: 8,413

    Referee: Rubiel Vazquez

    Virginia

    Georgetown

    GK 1 United States Colin Shutler
    DF 5 United States Henry Kessler Yellow card 70'
    DF 13 United States Bret Halsey Yellow card 88'
    DF 17 Norway Andreas Ueland Yellow card 50'
    DF 30 Germany Robin Afamefuna downward-facing red arrow 78' Yellow card 78'
    MF 7 Scotland Daniel Steedman 58'
    MF 8 New Zealand Joe Bell 10' Yellow card 67'
    MF 11 Tanzania Irakoze Donasiyano
    FW 9 United States Daryl Dike Yellow card 86' 86'
    FW 10 England Nathaniel Crofts
    FW 18 Sweden Axel Gunnarsson downward-facing red arrow 55' upward-facing green arrow 72'
    Substitutes:
    DF 12 United States Spencer Patton upward-facing green arrow 55' downward-facing red arrow 72' upward-facing green arrow 87' Yellow card 108'
    FW 20 Zimbabwe Cabrel Happi Kamseu upward-facing green arrow 85' downward-facing red arrow 87'
    MF 21 United States Aaron James upward-facing green arrow 78' downward-facing red arrow 85'
    Manager:
    United States George Gelnovatch
    GK 30 El Salvador Tomás Romero
    RB 12 United States Dylan Nealis downward-facing red arrow 104'
    CB 5 United States Daniel Wu (c) 22'
    CB 2 United States Rio Hope-Gund
    LB 4 United States Sean O'Hearn Yellow card 86'
    RM 8 France J.B. Fischer downward-facing red arrow 22' upward-facing green arrow 75' downward-facing red arrow 85' upward-facing green arrow 98' downward-facing red arrow 106'
    CM 7 United States Jacob Montes downward-facing red arrow 37' upward-facing green arrow 46' downward-facing red arrow 62' upward-facing green arrow 70'
    CM 3 United States Paul Rothrock downward-facing red arrow 22' upward-facing green arrow 46' downward-facing red arrow 58' upward-facing green arrow 91' downward-facing red arrow 98' 16'
    LM 6 United States Sean Zawadzki
    ST 27 United States Zach Riviere downward-facing red arrow 22' upward-facing green arrow 58' downward-facing red arrow 70' upward-facing green arrow 98'
    ST 9 United States Derek Dodson downward-facing red arrow 37' upward-facing green arrow 46' downward-facing red arrow 62' upward-facing green arrow 70' downward-facing red arrow 98' upward-facing green arrow 101' downward-facing red arrow 108' 81'
    Substitutes:
    FW 20 Nigeria Ifunanyachi Achara upward-facing green arrow 22' downward-facing red arrow 31' upward-facing green arrow 70' downward-facing red arrow 84'
    MF 11 United States Jack Beer upward-facing green arrow 31' downward-facing red arrow 46' upward-facing green arrow 62' downward-facing red arrow 77' upward-facing green arrow 91' downward-facing red arrow 98'
    MF 10 United States Ethan Lochner upward-facing green arrow 37' downward-facing red arrow 46'
    DF 22 United States Foster McCune upward-facing green arrow 44' downward-facing red arrow 58' upward-facing green arrow 77' downward-facing red arrow 91' upward-facing green arrow 101'
    DF 17 United States Dante Polvara upward-facing green arrow 22' downward-facing red arrow 75' upward-facing green arrow 85' downward-facing red arrow 98' upward-facing green arrow 106' Yellow card 90'
    MF 18 United States Aidan Rocha upward-facing green arrow 104'
    FW 14 United States Will Sands upward-facing green arrow 22' downward-facing red arrow 44' upward-facing green arrow 58' downward-facing red arrow 70' upward-facing green arrow 84' downward-facing red arrow 91' upward-facing green arrow 98' downward-facing red arrow 101' Yellow card 64'
    FW 13 United States Riley Strassner upward-facing green arrow 37' downward-facing red arrow 46' upward-facing green arrow 62' downward-facing red arrow 70' upward-facing green arrow 98' downward-facing red arrow 101' upward-facing green arrow 108'
    Manager:
    United States Brian Wiese

    College Cup MVP
    Amar Sejdic (Maryland)

    Assistant referees:
    Danny Thornberry (United States)
    Tom Felice (United States)
    Fourth official:
    Chris Penso (United States)

    Match rules:

    • 90 minutes.
    • 20 minutes of extra time if necessary.
    • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
    • Unlimited substitutes, may not return if subbed out in the first half; may return unlimited times in the second half.

    Statistics[edit]

    Overall[15]
    Maryland Akron
    Goals scored 1 0
    Total shots 15 10
    Shots on target 8 2
    Saves 2 7
    Corner kicks 7 5
    Fouls committed 10 7
    Offsides 0 0
    Yellow cards 1 3
    Red cards 0 1

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Northam, Mitchell (November 17, 2019). "College soccer: Virginia tops Clemson for ACC men's title". Pro Soccer USA. Archived from the original on December 16, 2019. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ a b c Darney, Caroline (November 17, 2019). "ACC CHAMPIONS!! Virginia takes home the title with 3-1 win over Clemson". Streaking the Lawn. SB Nation. Retrieved December 17, 2019.
  • ^ "2019 Men's Soccer Cumulative Statistics". virginiasports.com. December 16, 2019. Retrieved December 17, 2019.
  • ^ a b Shiers, Mike (December 1, 2019). "No. 1 UVa Men's Soccer beats St. John's 3-0 to advance to NCAA Quarterfinals". WVIR-TV. The CW Plus. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ Conlin, Bennett (November 30, 2019). "Virginia men's soccer shuts down St. John's to reach Elite Eight". The Daily Progress. Berkshire Hathaway. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ Rekulapelli, Akhil (December 1, 2019). "No. 1 Virginia blanks No. 14 St. John's in NCAA third round 3-0". The Cavalier Daily. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ "No. 1 Virginia Hosts No. 5 SMU in NCAA Quarterfinal on Friday". University of Virginia Athletics. December 5, 2019. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ a b c Blum, Sam (December 7, 2019). "SMU soccer season ends in NCAA Tournament quarterfinals with OT loss to Virginia". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ a b c Bennett, Conlin (December 12, 2019). "Virginia men's soccer team eyes national title in familiar destination". The Richmond Times-Dispatch. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ "No. 1 Virginia facing off against No. 9 Wake Forest in Men's Soccer College Cup semifinals". SoccerWire. December 13, 2019. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ Shiers, Mike (December 14, 2019). "UVa men's soccer beats Wake Forest 2-1; Advances to national championship game". NBC29.com. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ a b Rodríguez, Juan Pablo (December 13, 2019). "Goals and Highlights: Virginia 2-1 Wake Forest in 2019 Men's College Cup". Vavel. Retrieved December 17, 2019.
  • ^ Dell, John (December 14, 2019). "Wake Forest falls to top-ranked Virginia 2-1 in College Cup semifinal in Cary". Winston-Salem Journal. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  • ^ "2019 - 2026 Future DI NCAA Championship Sites". NCAA. April 17, 2017. Retrieved December 8, 2018.
  • ^ "Box Score: Maryland vs. Akron (December 9, 2018)". University of Maryland Athletics. December 9, 2018. Retrieved December 10, 2018.

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