2009 NCAA Division I men's soccer tournament
Men's College Cup (semifinals & final) | |
---|---|
2009 Division I Men's College Cup logo | |
Tournament details | |
Country | United States |
Teams | 48 |
Defending champions | Maryland Terrapins |
Final positions | |
Champions | Virginia Cavaliers |
Runner-up | Akron Zips |
Tournament statistics | |
Matches played | 47 |
Goals scored | 120 (2.55 per match) |
Top goal scorer(s) | Will Bates (4) |
The 2009 NCAA Division I men's soccer tournament was a tournament of 48 teams from NCAA Division I who played for the NCAA Championship in soccer . The semifinals and final were held at WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary, North Carolina. All the other games were played at the home field of the higher seeded team (indicated by * for non-seeded teams). The final was held on December 13, 2009 with Virginia defeating Akron, 3–2 in a penalty shoot-out, following a goalless regulation and two overtimes.
The bracket was announced November 16, 2009. The tournament started on November 19. The second round was played on November 22. The third round was played on November 29. The Regional Finals were played on December 4 and 5.
Regional 1
[edit ]Regional 2
[edit ]Regional 3
[edit ]Regional 4
[edit ]College Cup
[edit ]All matches held in WakeMed Soccer Park, Cary, NC
December 11 National Championship
December 13
Schedule
[edit ]Host team, or higher seed, is listed on the Left. Away team or lower seed is listed on the right.
First Round
[edit ]Second Round
[edit ]Third Round
[edit ]Quarterfinals
[edit ]Semifinals
[edit ]Championship
[edit ]- Tchani soccer ball with check mark
- Dimas soccer ball with check mark
- Hiller soccer ball with check mark
- Villanueva soccer ball with red X
- Monaco soccer ball with red X
Goal scorers
[edit ]- 4 goals
- United States Will Bates – Virginia
- 3 goals
- Thailand Anthony Ampaipitakwong – Akron
- United States Luke Gorczyca – Drake
- United States Alex Dixon – North Carolina
- United States David Walker – UC Santa Barbara
- United States Zack Schilawski – Wake Forest
- 2 goals
- Canada Kyle Bekker – Boston College
- United States Karl Reddick – Boston College
- United States Kevin Shrout – Drake
- United States Garrett Webb – Drake
- United States Ryan Finley – Duke
- United States Darren Yeagle – Indiana
- United States Billy Cortes – Maryland
- United States Casey Townsend – Maryland
- United States Jack Hillgard – Northwestern
- United States Collen Warner – Portland
- United States James Dice – Saint Louis
- United States Alex Sweetin -Saint Louis
- United States Austin Neil – Tulsa
- Cameroon Tony Tchani – Virginia
- United States Austin da Luz – Wake Forest
- 1 goal
- United States Teal Bunbury – Akron
- United States Kofi Sarkodie – Akron
- Israel Mori Avi Hana – Boston College
- New Zealand Colin Murphy – Boston College
- United States Charlie Rugg – Boston College
- Canada Sean Rosa – Brown
- United States Brendan Burgforf – Bucknell
- United States Adam Gross – Charlotte
- New Zealand Dan Keat – Dartmouth
- United States Matt Kuhn – Drake
- United States Kenan Malicevic – Drake
- United States Michael Noonan – Drake
- United States Cole Grossman – Duke
- United States Trae Harrison – Duke
- United States Christian Ibeagha – Duke
- United States Ryan McDaniel – Duke
- United States Andrew Wenger – Duke
- United States Tony Walls – Green Bay
- United States Andre Akpan – Harvard
- United States Adam Rousmaniere – Harvard
- England Richard Smith – Harvard
- United States Will Bruin – Indiana
- England Phil Bannister – Loyola Maryland
- United States Vincent Ocampo – Loyola Marymount
- United States Jason Herrick – Maryland
- United States Drew Yates – Maryland
- United States Rubin Bega – Michigan State
- United States Heath Melugin – Missouri State
- United States Lance Rozeboom – New Mexico
- United States Billy Schuler – North Carolina
- United States Kirk Urso – North Carolina
- Trinidad and Tobago Akil DeFreitas – North Carolina State
- United States Piero Bellizzi – Northwestern
- United States Jeb Brovsky – Notre Dame
- Nigeria Bright Dike – Notre Dame
- United States John Schaefer – Notre Dame
- United States Brian Forgue – Penn State
- United States Drew Chrostek – Portland
- United States Ryan Luke – Portland
- United States Max Alvarez – Sacramento State
- United States Bryan Baker – Sacramento State
- United States Scott Crandall – Sacramento State
- United States Michael Roach – Saint Louis
- United States Adam Jahn – Stanford
- United States Daniel Leon – Stanford
- United States Adoni Levine – Stanford
- United States Dominique Yahyavi – Stanford
- Norway Fredrik Brustad – Stetson
- Venezuela Bernardo Añor – South Florida
- Haiti Sébastien Thurière – South Florida
- United States Blaine Gonsalves – Tulsa
- Scotland Ashley McInnes – Tulsa
- United States Jose Parada – Tulsa
- United States Chandler Hoffman – UCLA
- United States Ryan Hollingshead – UCLA
- United States Fernando Monge – UCLA
- United States Kyle Nakazawa – UCLA
- United States Shawn Guderian – UNC Wilmington
- United States Daniel Roberts – UNC Wilmington
- United States Neil Barlow – Virginia
- United States Ari Dimas – Virginia
- United States Jordan Evans – Virginia
- United States Hunter Jumper – Virginia
- United States Brian Ownby – Virginia
- United States Anthony Arena – Wake Forest
- United States Corben Bone – Wake Forest
- United States Andy Lubahn – Wake Forest
- United States Sam Redmond – Wake Forest
- United States Husref Jopic – Western Illinois
- Somalia Said Abdi – Winthrop
- Canada Cameron Alksnis – Winthrop
See also
[edit ]References
[edit ]- "2009 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship" (PDF). Men’s Division I Championship Brackets. National Collegiate Athletic Association. p. 49. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 16, 2012. Retrieved August 31, 2011.