College soccer
College soccer is a term used to describe association football played by teams who are operated by colleges and universities as opposed to a professional league operated for exclusively financial purposes. College soccer is probably most widespread in the United States, but is also important in South Korea and Canada.
In the United States, college soccer is featured in many collegiate athletic associations including NCAA, NAIA, the NCCAA and USCAA.
Many top American college soccer players play for separate teams in the Premier Development League (PDL) during the summer. One college club, the BYU Cougars men's team, have foregone playing in the NCAA or NAIA and instead play all of their games in the PDL.[1]
In 2011, the official College Soccer Scoreboard will be powered by the NSCAA and TopDrawerSoccer.com, covering all Division I, II, III, NAIA, and NJCAA games.
Rules
While similar in general appearance, NCAA rules diverge significantly from FIFA Laws of the Game. If a player accumulates five yellow cards over the period of one season, he or she is banned one game. A manager may make unlimited substitutions; however, a player cannot re-enter a game in the same half that he left in. All matches have an overtime period if the game remains tied after 90 minutes. As opposed to a classic two half overtime, a golden goal rule is applied. If neither team scores in the two ten-minute halves, the match ends in a draw (unless it is a playoff match, then it would be penalty kicks). College soccer is played on a "running clock" that is constantly counting down unless the referee signals for the clock to be stopped by injuries, substitutions, and when he feels a team is wasting time. The clock is also stopped after goals until play is restarted. In most professional leagues, there is an up-counting clock with injury time.[2]
Divisions and conferences in the United States
NCAA Division I
There are 198 Division 1 Men's Soccer Programs.[3]
NCAA Division II
NCAA Division III
NAIA
Divisions and conferences internationally
Canada
In Canada, there are two organizations that regulate university and collegiate athletics.
Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS)
Canadian Colleges Athletic Association
South Korea
In South Korea, Korea University and Yonsei University compete in soccer, baseball, basketball, ice hockey, and rugby.
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, association football in colleges and universities is governed by the BUSA Football League.
National college soccer awards
- See Category:College soccer awards and trophies
Notable American men's college soccer graduates
Noted as players
- Jeff Agoos, Virginia
- Carlos Bocanegra, UCLA
- Conor Casey, Portland
- Brian Ching, Gonzaga
- Steve Cherundolo, Portland
- Charlie Davies, Boston College
- Jay DeMerit, UIC
- Clint Dempsey, Furman
- Maurice Edu, Maryland
- Benny Feilhaber, UCLA
- Mike Fisher, Virginia
- Brad Friedel, UCLA
- Brad Guzan, South Carolina
- John Harkes, Virginia
- Frankie Hejduk, UCLA
- Stuart Holden, Clemson
- Cobi Jones, UCLA
- Kasey Keller, Portland
- Alexi Lalas, Rutgers
- Clint Mathis, South Carolina
- Tony Meola, Virginia
- Brian McBride, Saint Louis
- Ben Olsen, Virginia
- Oguchi Onyewu, Clemson
- Eddie Pope, North Carolina
- Tab Ramos, North Carolina State
- Claudio Reyna, Virginia
- Kyle Rote, Jr., Sewanee
- Eric Wynalda, San Diego State
Noted in other fields
Notable non-American men's college soccer graduates
Noted as players
- Joe Addo, George Mason (Ghana)
- Cha Du-Ri, Korea University (South Korea)
- Rob Friend, UC Santa Barbara (Canada)
- Shaka Hislop, Howard (Trinidad and Tobago)
- Vedad Ibišević, Saint Louis (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
- Stern John, Mercer Community College (Trinidad and Tobago)
- Shalrie Joseph, St. John's (NY) (Grenada)
- Kevin McKenna, Calgary (Canada)
- Tony Lochhead, UC Santa Barbara (New Zealand)
- Alejandro Moreno, UNC Greensboro (Venezuela)
- Ryan Nelsen, Stanford (New Zealand)
- Joseph Ngwenya, Coastal Carolina (Zimbabwe)
- Olivier Occean, Southern Connecticut State (Canada)
- Damani Ralph, UConn (Jamaica)
- Santiago Solari, Richard Stockton (Argentina)
- Paul Stalteri, Clemson (Canada)
- Neven Subotić, South Florida (Serbia) — also a naturalized US citizen who represented the country at U-17 and U-20 levels
- Thompson Usiyan, Appalachian State (Nigeria)
- David Weir, Evansville (Scotland)
- Andy Williams, Rhode Island (Jamaica)
- Max von Schlebrügge, Florida Atlantic University (Sweden)
- Tamir Linhart, George Mason University (Israel)
Noted in other fields
Notable men's college soccer coaches
- Al Albert, William and Mary
- Bruce Arena, Virginia
- Bob Bradley, Princeton
- Clive Charles, Portland
- Sasho Cirovski, Maryland
- George Gelnovatch, Virginia
- Barry Gorman, Penn State
- Schellas Hyndman, Southern Methodist
- Ibrahim M. Ibrahim, Clemson
- Lev Kirshner, San Diego State
- Stephen Negoesco, San Francisco
- Mike Pantalione, Yavapai College
- Sigi Schmid, UCLA
- Tim Vom Steeg, UC Santa Barbara
- Jerry Yeagley, Indiana
Notable American women's college soccer graduates
- Michelle Akers, UCF
- Shannon Boxx, Notre Dame
- Brandi Chastain, Cal and Santa Clara
- Lorrie Fair, North Carolina
- Joy Fawcett, Cal
- Julie Foudy, Stanford
- Mia Hamm, North Carolina
- April Heinrichs, North Carolina
- Angela Hucles, Virginia
- Carin Jennings-Gabarra, UC Santa Barbara
- Kristine Lilly, North Carolina
- Shannon MacMillan, Portland
- Kate Markgraf, Notre Dame
- Tiffeny Milbrett, Portland
- Heather Mitts, Florida
- Heather O'Reilly, North Carolina
- Carla Overbeck, North Carolina
- Cindy Parlow, North Carolina
- Christie Rampone, Monmouth
- Briana Scurry, UMass
- Hope Solo, Washington
- Aly Wagner, Santa Clara
- Abby Wambach, Florida
- Cat Whitehill, North Carolina
- Michelle Bougor Brannigan, Saint Michael's College
Notable non-American women's college soccer graduates
See also
Notes and references
External links
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NCAA |
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Division I sports
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Division II |
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Division III |
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