First-team all-region and second-team all-BIG EAST senior midfielder/forward Courtney Rosen will lead Notre Dame into a pair of exhibition matches next week as the Fighting Irish build up to their 2009 season opener on Aug. 21 against Wisconsin.

#4 Irish Tangle With #21 Santa Clara Sunday For Inn At Saint Mary's Classic Title

Aug. 30, 2008

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2008 ND Women’s Soccer — Game 3
16th annual Inn at Saint Mary’s Soccer Classic
#4 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (2-0-0 / 0-0-0 BIG EAST) vs. #21 Santa Clara Broncos (2-0-0 / 0-0-0 WCC)

DATE: August 31, 2008
TIME: 1:30 p.m. ET
AT: Notre Dame, Ind. – Alumni Field (2,500)
SERIES: ND leads 8-5
1ST MTG: ND 1-0 (10/8/95)
LAST MTG: SCU 7-1 (9/7/07)
WEBCAST: UND.com (live) (Tom Staudt, p-b-p / Drew Spada, color)
LIVE STATS: UND.com
TEXT ALERT: Sign up at UND.com
TICKETS: (574) 631-7356

Storylines

  • Notre Dame faces its first ranked opponent of the season, having gone 74-22-4 (.760) against the NSCAA Top 25 in the Randy Waldrum era (since ’99).
  • The Irish are going in search of their 12th home tournament title in 16 tries.

#4 Irish Tangle With #21 Santa Clara Sunday For Inn At Saint Mary’s Classic Title
Building on a pair of solid all-around efforts to open the season, No. 4 Notre Dame will take on its first ranked opponent of the ’08 campaign when it squares off with 21st-ranked Santa Clara Sunday at 1:30 p.m. (ET) in the championship game of the Inn at Saint Mary’s Soccer Classic at Alumni Field.

For the second consecutive game, the Irish (2-0) got off to a quick start, scoring twice in the first 12 minutes and rolling to a 4-0 win over Loyola Marymount during Friday’s opening night action at the Inn at Saint Mary’s Classic. Senior All-America forward and Hermann Trophy candidate Kerri Hanks was a one-woman wrecking crew against the Lions, ringing up her school-record sixth career hat trick for Notre Dame.

The Irish defense also was stout against LMU, fueling a 23-4 shot advantage (11-2 in shots on goal). Junior goalkeeper Kelsey Lysander made two saves in the first 75 minutes, before sophomore Nikki Weiss came on to complete the shutout.

Rankings

  • Notre Dame is ranked fourth in the latest NSCAA poll. Other polls noted on page 5 of this notes package.
  • Santa Clara is 21st in this week’s NSCAA poll.

A Quick Look At The Fighting Irish
Notre Dame should roll out one of its deepest teams in years, with 19 monogram winners (including nine starters) back from last season’s squad that went 19-5-2 (11-0-0 in the BIG EAST) and advanced to the NCAA College Cup semifinals for the ninth time in the past 14 years. The Irish also bring back a powerful offensive punch, with 83.3 percent of their goalscoring (55 of 66) returning.

As if that weren’t enough, Notre Dame welcomes a highly-regarded nine-player freshman class to campus, with three of those incoming players having earned multiple national All-America honors during their prep or club careers.

Leading the way for Notre Dame this season will be two of the country’s premier front-line players (and ’07 NSCAA first-team All-Americans) in senior forward Kerri Hanks and senior midfielder/forward Brittany Bock.

Hanks (14G-21A in 2007) continues to blaze new trails through the NCAA and Notre Dame record books, having led the nation in assists the past two seasons, and aiming to become the third Division I player ever to log 70 goals and 70 assists in her career (68G-59A entering Sunday’s action). Among the nation’s most gifted players, she also can become the 23rd Division I player ever to collect four All-America citations, and she remains a prime candidate for the Hermann Trophy, an award she claimed as a sophomore in 2006.

Bock (16G-4A), one of the Irish co-captains in 2008, emerged as a genuine offensive threat last season, leading the team in goals and finishing second with 36 points. The reigining BIG EAST Co-Offensive Player of the Year, Bock could see time at either forward (where she has spent much of the past two seasons) or midfield (her natural position) depending on other personnel moves.

Another key player for the Irish this season will be senior center back and co-captain Carrie Dew (2G-3A), the 2006 BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year who made a successful recovery from an ACL injury late in the ’06 regular season with a solid ’07 campaign. She also anchored a Notre Dame back line that allowed only 10 goals and less than three shots per game during a 17-game unbeaten string in the final two months of the season.

A Quick Look At Santa Clara
Santa Clara comes into this weekend’s tournament ranked 12th in the current Soccer America poll and 21st in the latest NSCAA poll; the Broncos also are slotted 16th by both Soccer Times and Soccer Buzz.

A perennial power on the national soccer scene, Santa Clara has 12 letterwinners and seven starters back in the fold this season following a 12-6-3 campaign in 2007 (4-3 in the West Coast Conference, tying fellow ’08 Inn at Saint Mary’s Classic participant Loyola Marymount for third place) that ended in the first round of the NCAA Championship.

Junior forward (and Hermann Trophy candidate) Kiki Bosio is SCU’s top returning scorer (7G-6A in 2007), while junior defender Courtney Lewis proved to be an offensive threat from the backline with four goals a season ago. Senior goalkeeper Meagan McCray posted a 1.03 goals-against average last season and is expected to backstop the Broncos again this year.

Santa Clara (2-0) has opened this season with wins at San Jose State (3-0) and vs. No. 11 West Virginia (2-1, 2ot), with the latter victory coming Friday on the opening night of the Inn at Saint Mary’s Classic. Sophomore midfielder Kendra Perry scored both Bronco goals in the win over WVU, the latter coming 1:33 into the second overtime. Classmate Anessa Patton has looked sharp as well, assisting on Perry’s game-winner Friday night after scoring her first career goal to cap the SJSU triumph. McCray has backstopped both SCU wins this year.

Head coach Jerry Smith is in his 22nd season at Santa Clara, sporting a 340-90-30 (.772) career record. In terms of winning percentage, he is the sixth-winningest coach in NCAA Division I history and fifth among active D-I coaches (Notre Dame’s Randy Waldrum is fourth all-time and third among active skippers with a .774 (294-79-20) success rate).

The Notre Dame-Santa Clara Series
Through the years, the matchups between Notre Dame and Santa Clara have featured some of the finest action that women’s college soccer has to offer. The Irish lead the all-time series with the Broncos, 8-5, including a 5-1 edge when the scene shifts to Alumni Field. Both teams also have been ranked each time they have played, although the higher-ranked side owns just a 7-6 edge in the series.

Notre Dame is 3-0 against SCU in NCAA Championship play, including 1-0 national semifinal wins in 1999 (at San Jose’s Spartan Stadium) and 2004 (at the SAS Soccer Complex in Cary, N.C.), with the latter victory paving the way for a second Irish national title.

The teams have met annually in the regular season since 2002, with the series split 3-3 in that span. Last year, third-ranked Santa Clara defeared No. 2 Notre Dame, 7-1, at the Santa Clara/adidas Classic, posting the highest goal total by either side in the series. The Irish and Broncos have played four times during the Inn at Saint Mary’s Classic, with Notre Dame winning three of those encounters (6-1 in ’00; 5-2 in ’04; 3-1 in ’06), while SCU’s only win over the Irish at Alumni Field came in ’02 (4-0).

The Last Time Notre Dame And SCU Met
Kiki Bosio, Courtney Lewis and Brittany Klein each scored twice, with Bosio and Klein adding an assist as third-ranked Santa Clara downed No. 2 Notre Dame, 7-1 at the SCU/adidas Classic on Sept. 7, 2007, in Silicon Valley.

Michele Weissenhofer scored the lone Irish goal at 23:11, taking a pass from Kerri Hanks to get Notre Dame within 2-1. However, Meagan Snell scored just 89 seconds later to give the Broncos a two-goal halftime cushion. Notre Dame changed to a 3-3-4 formation in the second half in an attempt to rally, but the hosts countered by going over the top of the pressing Irish offense, scoring four times to take the deceptively easy win.

Lauren Karas started in goal for Notre Dame and made two saves while allowing three goals in the first half, before giving way to Kelsey Lysander, who turned aside one shot and yielded the four second-half tallies.

Tournament-Tested
The Inn at Saint Mary’s Classic (and its previous incarnations) date back to the 1992 season, with Notre Dame playing its home tournament almost annually since then (every year but 1994). The Irish are 25-4-2 (.839) all-time in these home tournaments with an 86-30 scoring edge. Notre Dame also has won its home tournament in 11 of the previous 15 seasons it has been played, including four of the past five years (Washington State edged the Irish for last year’s title when Notre Dame lost to 16th-ranked Oklahoma State, 2-1 in overtime).

Spreading The Wealth
In an early example of the incredible depth of this year’s Notre Dame squad, the Irish had seven different players score goals in the season-opening 7-0 whitewash of Michigan (including three who tallied their first career goals). That matched the largest number of goalscorers in one game during the 10-year Randy Waldrum era (since ’99), and the most since the 2005 season opener (an 11-1 rout of New Hampshire on Aug. 26 in the TD Banknorth Classic at Burlington, Vt.).

Game #2 Recap: Loyola Marymount
Senior All-America forward and Hermann Trophy candidate Kerri Hanks showed why she is one of the nation’s elite players on Friday, registering her school-record sixth career hat trick to single-handedly lead No. 4 Notre Dame to a 4-0 victory over Loyola Marymount on the opening night of the Inn at Saint Mary’s Soccer Classic before 1,363 fans at Alumni Field.

Hanks scored twice on penalty kicks in the first 12 minutes of the contest, before capping off her record-setting night by delivering a highlight-reel goal with 37 seconds to play. Hanks’ sixth hat trick tops the old school record of five, jointly held by Rosella Guerrero (1992-95), Monica Gerardo (1995-98) and Jenny Heft (1996-99).

Freshman forward Melissa Henderson also continues to be a stealth weapon for the Irish early on this season, coming off the bench to collect her second goal of the year in the 67th minute with an assist from senior defender Elise Weber.

Junior goalkeeper Kelsey Lysander went the first 75 minutes between the pipes for Notre Dame, making two saves before sophomore Nikki Weiss completed the shutout in the final 15 minutes.

The Irish (2-0) held a sizeable statistical advantage across the board against Loyola Marymount (0-1-1), which was making its first-ever visit to Alumni Field. Notre Dame outshot the Lions, 23-4, with an 11-2 edge in shots on goal. The Irish also took nine corner kicks to just one for LMU, and Notre Dame once again was able to go deep into its bench, with 22 different players seeing action on Friday.

Gone In 60 Seconds
Senior forward Kerri Hanks is on the verge of adding another feather in the cap of an already-brilliant career. The Allen, Texas, native is just one assist shy of becoming the sixth NCAA Division I player ever to amass 60 goals and 60 assists in her career (Hanks has 68G-59A entering Sunday’s game vs. Santa Clara). The five current members of this elite sorority (two of which are Notre Dame alums) are listed in the accompanying chart.

The national leader in assists the past two seasons (22 in ’06; 21 in ’07), Hanks could blow right by the 60-60 milestone and head straight for 70-70, a landmark achievement that only two players in the history of Division I women’s soccer have managed to attain.

Dew Named BIG EAST Defensive Player Of The Week
Senior defender and co-captain Carrie Dew was named as the BIG EAST Conference Defensive Player of the Week, it was announced Monday afternoon by the league office.

This marks the third time in her career that Dew has earned the award, following selections on Sept. 25, 2006, and Oct. 1, 2007. Dew also went on to be named the ’06 BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year, in addition to collecting first-team all-conference and National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) first-team all-Great Lakes Region honors.

On Aug. 22, Dew played an important role in Notre Dame’s 7-0 season-opening win over Michigan at Alumni Field. The Irish center back helped anchor a defensive unit that allowed the Wolverines just four total shots, including only one shot on goal. Notre Dame also posted its fifth consecutive shutout over UM and extended its string of consecutive scoreless minutes against Michigan to 518:22. Dew has been a part of the past four Irish shutouts against the Wolverines, starting three times.

Bock, Hanks On Hermann Trophy Watch List
Senior All-America forwards Kerri Hanks and Brittany Bock have been named to the 47-player watch list for the 2008 Missouri Athletic Club Hermann Trophy, which is presented annually to the nation’s top Division I women’s soccer player. Notre Dame is one of 13 teams to place more than one player on this year’s Hermann Trophy watch list, with Hanks being the lone previous winner on the `08 preseason Hermann Trophy chart.

A three-time All-American (twice on the first team) and the 2006 Hermann Trophy recipient (the first sophomore to garner the honor), Hanks is poised to become only the fourth multiple winner of the award, and the first to do so in non-consecutive years.

Bock emerged as one of the nation’s top offensive threats last season, earning first-team All-America honors and joining Hanks and recently-graduated forward (and current volunteer assistant coach) Amanda Cinalli on the Hermann Trophy final-15 (semifinalists) list.

Notre Dame is one of only two programs to field three or more different recipients of the prestigious Hermann Trophy, with Cindy Daws (1996) and Anne Makinen (2000) joining Hanks in this elite sorority. The 2008 Hermann Trophy winner will be announced during a news conference on Jan. 9, 2009, at the Missouri Athletic Club in St. Louis.

ND Picked To Win BIG EAST National Division
Notre Dame was the unanimous favorite to win the 2008 BIG EAST Conference National Division title, according to a vote of the league’s 16 head coaches released Wednesday afternoon. The Irish picked up the maximum 120 points, including all 15 possible first-place tallies (coaches may not vote for their own teams), in the balloting, as they seek their 12th BIG EAST regular-season crown and sixth in a row — seven of the previous 11 (’99-’01, ’03, ’05-’07) have been divisional championships (including the past three), while the other four were overall regular-season titles (’95-’97, ’04).

Notre Dame went 11-0-0 in the BIG EAST a year ago, and will head into the 2008 season with a 38-game unbeaten streak against conference opponents (36-0-2 since October 2005), the longest run in school history and tied for the fourth-longest in NCAA Division I history.

Bock Voted BIG EAST Preseason Offensive Player Of The Year
Along with their preseason poll, the conference coaches chose Irish senior All-America midfielder/forward (and co-captain) Brittany Bock as the 2008 BIG EAST Preseason Offensive Player of the Year. Bock, who also was a unanimous selection to the ’08 All-BIG EAST Preseason Team, led the league in goals (16) last year and became Notre Dame’s fourth consecutive winner of the BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Year award.

Fellow senior forward Kerri Hanks also was a unanimous choice on the preseason all-conference team following a 2007 campaign that saw her lead the nation in assists (21) for the second consecutive year and set the BIG EAST pace in points (49) while earning NSCAA first-team All-America honors for the second time. Hanks had been the BIG EAST Preseason Offensive Player of the Year the past two seasons and earned the league’s postseason Offensive Player of the Year honor in 2006.

The Golden Girls
Former Notre Dame standouts Kate (Sobrero) Markgraf (’98) and Shannon Boxx (’99) helped the United States successfully defend its Olympic gold medal with a 1-0 overtime win over Brazil in the 2008 title game on Aug. 21 in Beijing, China. Both players started and played all 120 minutes in the final on the way to earning their second consecutive gold medal.

The duo join fencer Mariel Zagunis (’10) as Notre Dame Olympians with multiple gold medals. Markgraf also matches Zagunis’ career total of three medals (Markgraf won silver with the USA at the ’00 Sydney Games), a standard also equalled by former track & field great Alex Wilson (’32).

A Little Added Face Time
Notre Dame is slated to play on television twice during the 2008 regular season. The Irish will visit Penn State on Sept. 21 with that game airing live on the Big Ten Network. Then, on Oct. 19, Notre Dame travels to Storrs, Conn., for a BIG EAST matchup with Connecticut which will be shown live on CBS College Sports.

In addition to its commercial TV coverage, Notre Dame enjoys an extensive broadcast footprint on the Internet. All of the Irish regular-season home games are slated to be broadcast live on the official Notre Dame athletics web site (www.UND.com), with supplemental live stats information provided by CBS College Sports Online’s GameTracker service.

Fans also can follow the Irish on their cell phones by signing up for the Irish ALERT text-messaging system. This free service is available by logging on the women’s soccer page at www.UND.com and scrolling down the right-hand sidebar.

Finally, the Notre Dame Sports Hotline (574-631-3000) remains a reliable resource for all the latest Irish athletics information. Regular updates on the Notre Dame women’s soccer program can be found by calling the Hotline, then selecting option 4 and pressing “2”.

Captains Courageous
Senior midfielder/forward Brittany Bock and senior defender Carrie Dew have been selected as team captains for the 2008 season.

Parking Changes
Due to ongoing construction within the Notre Dame Athletics Quad, parking for Irish soccer games this year is limited to the Eck Baseball Stadium and Joyce Center lots. Fans may ride the complimentary shuttle bus from the Eck Stadium lot, or walk around the south end of Eck Stadium, then proceed north between the stadium’s right-field wall and the soccer practice field before entering at the south end of Alumni Field.

Next Game: North Carolina
The schedule doesn’t get any easier for Notre Dame, as the Irish embark upon their first road trip of the season next weekend, beginning Friday at No. 2 North Carolina on the first night of the Carolina Classic. It will be the first matchup between the two legendary programs since Notre Dame knocked the Tar Heels out of last year’s NCAA Championship with a 3-2 victory in the third round at UNC’s Fetzer Field.

North Carolina (2-0) brings back 24 letterwinners, including eight starters, from that round-of-16 squad. The Tar Heels have opened this season with wins over Charlotte (5-1) and 13th-ranked Texas A&M (3-2), and are slated to face No. 14 Tennessee Sunday at noon (ET) on the final day of TAMU’s Weekend Invitational before returning home to await Notre Dame.

— ND —