#16 Franklin Pierce Stifles #2 Seattle Pacific, 2-0
Ravens advance to Division II record seventh National Championship match, seek record sixth title on Saturday
Provided by Franklin Pierce University Sports Information
ORANGE BEACH, Ala. (November 29, 2007) – Franklin Pierce
University, ranked 16th in the National Soccer Coaches Association
of America (NSCAA)/adidas Division II coaches’ poll, ended
No. 2-ranked Seattle Pacific University’s quest for a perfect
season and first National Championship with a 2-0 victory at the
NCAA Division II Women’s Soccer Championships, hosted by the
University of West Florida and the City of Orange Beach, in front
of 368 tonight.
Franklin Pierce (18-1-5) advances to Saturday’s National
Championship match to face 14th-ranked University of Tampa (19-2-2)
at the Orange Beach Sportsplex at 1 p.m. (EST). The Spartans upset
top-ranked Grand Valley State University (21-1-1) in today’s
first semifinal. Saturday’s championship match will be
televised live on College Sports Television (CSTV). Seattle Pacific
(23-1-0) was making its second Final Four appearance in just the
seventh year of the program’s existence.
Franklin Pierce, appearing in its record 14th Final Four, will
play for the National Championship for a Division II record seventh
time and will be seeking a record sixth national title on Saturday.
The Ravens captured National Championships a record four-straight
years from 1994-97 before notching its fifth title in 1999. They
last appeared in the title contest in 2003, falling to Kennesaw
State University, 2-0, in Virginia Beach, Va. Tampa, appearing in
the Final Four for the second-straight year, is playing in its
first National Championship match.
“It’s been a while since we’ve won one,”
said Franklin Pierce Head Coach Jeff Bailey, who will be seeking
his fourth National Championship as head coach of the Ravens.
“Maybe it’s our year this time. It’s good to be
back in it. Tampa was an underdog today like ourselves and it
should be a good match up on Saturday.”
Franklin Pierce posted its seventh-straight postseason shutout and
has yet to allow a goal in 650 postseason minutes, including 450 in
its five NCAA Tournament wins. Junior goalkeeper Brittany Ester
(Toms River, N.J./Toms River East) matched her season-high with
eight saves (four in each half) to collect her 12th shutout of the
season – moving her into a tie for third on the Ravens
single-season list. Ester has not allowed a goal in her last 678:11
dating back to the 62nd minute of Franklin Pierce’s 5-2
victory over Southern Connecticut State University in its regular
season finale.
“They were a very stingy defense,” said Seattle
Pacific Head Coach Chuck Sekyra. “I never felt like we got
behind them and alone with their keeper. They did a great job of
keeping our players in front of them. I definitely see Franklin
Pierce winning it if they play like that again.”
Sophomore goalkeeper Jesslyn Rahm (Eugene, Ore./South Eugene) made
three saves in goal for Seattle Pacific, who out shot Franklin
Pierce, 18-7 for the match – including 8-6 on target.
“We rode our luck a little bit in the first ten minutes of
each half,” said Bailey. “We defended great and
Brittany had a fantastic game.”
Ester was tested early, lunging to stop a shot by SPU junior
Shannon Oakes (Boise, Idaho/Boise) less than two minutes into the
match. SPU dominated the first ten minutes, before Franklin Pierce
gathered itself and began to gain possession leading up to its
opening goal.
“We wanted to put the pressure on them,” said Sekyra.
“That first shot nearly goes in and you wonder what kind of
game it could have been.”
Franklin Pierce has not trailed since netting the equalizing goal
in the 53rd minute of a 1-1 double-overtime draw at the University
of Massachusetts Lowell 1,087-minutes, 58-seconds ago. The Ravens
forged in front again as senior right back Taryn Welker (Wayne,
Pa./Conestoga) took a pass from classmate Jenna Giardina
(Pittsfield, Mass./Taconic) and charged to goal inside the penalty
area before beating Rahm to her right at the 21:44-mark. The goal
was Welker’s first of the season (sixth career) and first
since she netted a goal in a 5-1 win at Stonehill College on
September 20, 2006. The assist was the team-leading 13th of the
season for Giardina.
“I was looking to take it down the line and cross it,”
said Welker. “But no one was open and I saw an opening and
decided to go for it.”
Seattle Pacific nearly came right back and answered on
Ester’s lone mistake of the match, when she missed on an
attempted clear of a cross, but the ball trickled just wide of the
far post. Ester made a great save to her right on a drive just
23-yards out by senior Sarah Martinez (Bothell, Wash./Cedar Park
Christian) in the 33rd minute.
“We play well when we get in front and are pretty capable of
soaking up pressure,” said Bailey. “We’ve found
what kind of works for us now.”
Franklin Pierce added an important insurance goal 13:55 into the
second half when sophomore Mackenzie Bulych (Regina,
Saskatchewan/Dr. Martin LeBoldus) took a cross from freshman back
Kelly Weygand (Bridgewater, Mass./Bridgewater-Raynham) and fired
her sixth goal of the year past Rahm. The assist was
Weygand’s sixth of the season and team leading fourth of the
NCAA Tournament.
“Mackenzie had a very good game,” said Bailey.
“It’s very difficult to play up front on your own.
She’s done a lot lately and is a key to our team at this
point.”
The goal came moments after Oakes had a shot off a loose ball sail
just over the bar in the 54th minute. Martinez, the Falcons’
leading scorer this year with 17 goals and nine assists for 43
points, nearly brought SPU back into the match in the 61st minute,
but saw her shot drift just over the bar.
“(Franklin Pierce) were a solid defense,” said
Martinez. “We created a lot of scoring chances, but they
would always get a foot in there and stop it.”
Ester’s top save of the match came in the 66th minute when
she tipped a drive from junior Meredith Teague (Redmond,
Wash./Bellevue Christian) ticketed for the top shelf over the bar
for a corner kick. Sophomore Jocelyn Charette (Lakewood,
Wash./Curtis) had a shot in the 73rd minute carom off the left
post.
“I thought we played well,” said Sekyra. “We out
shoot a team 18-7 and hit the post four or five times and I think
created some awful good chances. I definitely want to give Franklin
Pierce a tremendous amount of credit. They defended the heck out of
the game.”
The win kept Franklin Pierce unbeaten in eight matches this season
against nationally ranked opponents (6-0-2). The Ravens have
outscored its ranked opposition 16-1 in those matches, posting a
miniscule (0.12 goals against average). The win also improved
Franklin Pierce’s all-time record against Far West region
opponents to 7-3-0 in program history in its first ever meeting
with Seattle Pacific.



























