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Charlotte 49ers men's soccer

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Charlotte 49ers
men's soccer
2019 Charlotte 49ers men's soccer team
Founded1976
UniversityUniversity of North Carolina at Charlotte
Head coachKevin Langan (8th season)
ConferenceC-USA
LocationCharlotte, North Carolina
StadiumTransamerica Field
(Capacity: 4,000)
Nickname49ers
ColorsGreen and white[1]
   
Home
Away
NCAA Tournament runner-up
2011
NCAA Tournament College Cup
1996, 2011
NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals
1996, 2011
NCAA Tournament Round of 16
1992, 1996, 2011
NCAA Tournament appearances
1991, 1992, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2019
Conference Tournament championships
1983, 1992, 1994, 1996, 2010, 2013
Conference Regular Season championships
1983, 1988, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014

The Charlotte 49ers men's soccer team is an intercollegiate varsity sports team of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. The team is a member of the Conference USA of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The team plays their home games at Transamerica Field in Charlotte, North Carolina. In 2011, the team reached the championship of the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship, for the first time in their program's history.[2]

History

In 1996, the Charlotte 49ers men's soccer team became the first Conference USA team in any sport to reach the National semi-finals. The Niners won a school record 19 games. They went 7–1 in Conference USA to capture the regular season title. The Niners defeated College of Charleston, Notre Dame and Hartford to reach the national semi-finals before falling to Florida International in front of 20,269 fans in Richmond, Virginia. Goalkeeper Jon Busch becomes the Niners' second first team All-American after recording 12 shutouts and a 0.89 goals against average. Busch also earned Conference USA Defensive Player of the Year honors. John Tart was named Conference USA Coach of the Year.

The most notable season in Charlotte soccer history came in 2011 when the 49ers became the first team of any sport in school history to reach an NCAA national championship. The team was ranked in the top 25 throughout the entire season thanks to a challenging yet successful non-conference campaign. The Niners finished the regular season with an Atlantic 10 record of 6–1–2 and 13–3–2 record overall. After an early disappointing loss to Xavier in the Atlantic 10 tournament, Charlotte then went on a deep run in the NCAA Tournament. The unseeded Niners defeated Furman, No. 11 UAB, No. 10 Akron, and No. 5 Connecticut to advance to the program's second ever College Cup in Hoover, Alabama. The Niners went on to defeat No. 3 Creighton before falling to No. 1 North Carolina in the national championship game with a score of 1–0.

Roster

As of July 27, 2019[3]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK United States USA Elliot Panicco
2 DF United States USA Delasi Batse
3 DF New Zealand NZL Luke Johnson
4 DF United States USA Noah Seach
5 DF United States USA Patrick Hogan
6 FW United States USA Maclean Holbrook
7 MF United States USA Joe Brito
8 MF Puerto Rico PUR Cooper Nugent
9 FW Canada CAN Preston Popp
10 FW Jamaica JAM Kameron Lacey
11 FW Iceland ISL Axel Sigurdarson
12 DF United States USA Jaxson Watermann
13 MF France FRA Teddy Chaouche
15 DF United States USA Ethan Sawdon
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 DF Spain ESP Miguel Anton
17 DF British Virgin Islands VGB Carson Price
18 MF United States USA John Ranshaw
19 MF United States USA Matteo Busio
22 MF United States USA Bryce Gilbert
23 MF United States USA Owen Peeler
24 MF United States USA Hunter Omli
25 GK United States USA Austin Mullins
27 DF United States USA TJ Suber
28 DF United States USA Sean Suber
29 DF United States USA Malcolm Walters
30 MF United States USA Chance Pellerin
31 GK United States USA Thomas Wallis
32 GK United States USA Ryan Burig

Individual career records

Career goals

No. Name Seasons Years Goals
1. Fernando Sosa 1978–81 4 66
2. David Cooper 1985–88 4 40
3. Gabe Garcia 1988–91 4 39
4. Mac Cozier 1992–95 4 34
5. Jimmy Koutsokalis 1977–80 4 29
John Griffith 1983–86 4 29
Matthys Barker 1994–97 4 29
8. Doug Pratt 1991–93 3 28
Mira Mupier 2001–04 4 28
10. Tureh Doh 1979–82 4 27

[4]

Career assists

No. Name Seasons Years Assists
1. Mac Cozier 1992–95 4 31
2. Randy Sheen 1990–94 4 28
Matthys Barker 1994–97 4 28
4. Jimmy Koutsokalis 1977–80 4 26
5. Ian Dennis 1989–93 4 25
6. Fernando Sosa 1978–81 4 24
7. A. Richardson 1987–90 4 22
Jamath Shoffner 1996–99 3 22
9. John Griffith 1983–86 4 21
Jon Mabee 1995–98 4 21
Matt Bradner 1995–99 4 21

[4]

Coaches

Head coach history

Coach Tenure Record Conference GF GA NCAA Apps
Ike Gardner 1976–80 47–47–5 6–9–1 238 266
Steve Parker 1981 6–12–0 0–2–0 39 37
Bob Warming 1982–88 67–52–17 16–9–4 306 217
Frank Kohlenstein 1989–94 77–32–12 20–6–6 277 145 3
John Tart 1995–2006 117–92–28 53–40–11 403 318 2
Jeremy Gunn 2006–11 66–26–12 35–13–6 194 105 2
Kevin Langan 2012–Present 86–34–20 38-10-10 ~~ ~~ 6
Totals 1976–2018 526–295–94 228–149–38 1457 1088 7

[4]

Professional players

Major League Soccer

USL Pro

North American Soccer League

S.League

References

  1. ^ "49ers Color System". Charlotte 49ers Brand Standards (PDF). June 23, 2020. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  2. ^ "Men's Soccer Advances to National Championship". Charlotte49ers.com. Retrieved December 10, 2011.
  3. ^ "2019 Men's Soccer Roster". Charlotte 49ers. Retrieved July 27, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c [1] Archived 2012-06-09 at the Wayback Machine Charlotte 49ers Men's Soccer 2011 Media Guide

External links