Jump to content

2016 Southeastern Conference women's soccer season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Joeykai (talk | contribs) at 18:19, 26 July 2020 (link Bri Folds using Find link). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Southeastern Conference
Season2016
2015
2017
2016 SEC women's soccer standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T   PCT W   L   T   PCT
No. 5 South Carolina  ‍‍‍y 11 0 0   1.000 21 1 1   .935
No. 8 Auburn  ‍‍‍y 9 2 0   .818 17 6 0   .739
No. 19 Arkansas  ‍‍‍y 8 3 0   .727 18 5 1   .771
No. 10 Florida  ‍‍y 8 3 0   .727 17 5 1   .761
Missouri  ‍‍‍y 6 4 1   .591 11 7 2   .600
Tennessee  ‍‍‍ 5 5 1   .500 11 9 1   .548
Texas A&M  ‍‍‍y 5 5 1   .500 12 8 2   .591
Vanderbilt  ‍‍‍ 5 5 1   .500 9 9 1   .500
Alabama  ‍‍‍ 4 5 2   .455 9 8 2   .526
Ole Miss  ‍‍‍ 4 7 0   .364 9 11 0   .450
Georgia  ‍‍‍ 3 8 0   .273 6 11 1   .361
LSU  ‍‍‍ 2 8 1   .227 7 11 1   .395
Kentucky  ‍‍‍ 1 7 3   .227 5 9 4   .389
Mississippi State  ‍‍‍ 1 10 0   .091 6 12 0   .333
† – Conference champion
‡ – 2016 SEC Tournament champion
y – Invited to the NCAA tournament
As of 2016-11-21
Rankings from NSCAA

The 2016 Southeastern Conference women's soccer season was the 214th season of women's varsity soccer in the conference.

The Florida Gators are both the defending regular season and tournament champions.

Changes from 2015

  • None

Teams

Stadia and locations

Team Location Stadium Capacity
Alabama Crimson Tide Tuscaloosa, Alabama Alabama Soccer Stadium 1,500
Arkansas Razorbacks Fayetteville, Arkansas Razorback Soccer Stadium 2,000
Auburn Tigers Auburn, Alabama Auburn Soccer Complex 1,500
Florida Gators Gainesville, Florida Pressly Stadium 4,500
Georgia Lady Bulldogs Athens, Georgia Turner Soccer Complex 1,700
Kentucky Wildcats Lexington, Kentucky Bell Soccer Complex 3,368
LSU Tigers Baton Rouge, Louisiana LSU Soccer Stadium 2,197
Mississippi State Lady Bulldogs Starkville, Mississippi MSU Soccer Field 500
Missouri Tigers Columbia, Missouri Walton Stadium 2,500
Ole Miss Rebels Oxford, Mississippi Ole Miss Soccer Stadium 1,500
South Carolina Gamecocks Columbia, South Carolina Stone Stadium 5,000
Tennessee Volunteers Knoxville, Tennessee Regal Stadium 3,000
Texas A&M Aggies College Station, Texas Ellis Field 3,500
Vanderbilt Commodores Nashville, Tennessee Vanderbilt Soccer/Lacrosse Complex 2,400

Regular season

Rankings

Legend
  Increase in ranking
  Decrease in ranking
  Not ranked previous week
  Pre Wk
2
Wk
3
Wk
4
Wk
5
Wk
6
Wk
7
Wk
8
Wk
9
Wk
10
Wk
11
Wk
12
Wk
13
Final
Alabama C
Arkansas C
Auburn C 12
Florida C 7
Georgia C
Kentucky C
LSU C
Mississippi State C
Missouri C 22
Ole Miss C
South Carolina C 24
Tennessee C
Texas A&M C 8
Vanderbilt C

Postseason

SEC Tournament

Bracket

First Round
Monday, October 31
Quarterfinals
Wednesday, November 2
Semifinals
Friday, November 4
Championship
Sunday, November 6
            
2 Auburn 3
7 Tennessee 1
7 Tennessee 2
10 Ole Miss 0
2 Auburn 1
3 Arkansas 3
3 Arkansas 1
6 Vanderbilt 0
3 Arkansas 1
4 Florida 2OT
1 South Carolina 2
8 Texas A&M 1
8 Texas A&M 1
9 Alabama 0
1 South Carolina 0
4 Florida 1
4 Florida 3 (8)
5 Missouri 3 (7)

NCAA Tournament

Seed Region School 1st Round 2nd Round 3rd Round Quarterfinals Semifinals Championship

All-SEC awards and teams

[1]

2016 SEC Women's Soccer Individual Awards
Award Recipient(s)
Coach of the Year Shelley Smith, South Carolina
Offensive of the Year Savannah McCaskill, South Carolina
Defensive Player of the Year Kaleigh Kurtz, South Carolina
Freshman of the Year Sarah Luebbert, Missouri
Scholar-Athlete of the Year Casie Ramsier, Auburn
2016 SEC Women's Soccer All-Conference Teams
First Team Second Team Rookie Team
  • Forward: Kristen Dodson, Auburn
  • Forward: Savannah Jordan, Florida
  • Forward: Savannah McCaskill, South Carolina
  • Forward: Hannah Wilkinson, Tennessee
  • Midfielder: Claire Kelley, Arkansas
  • Midfielder: Casie Ramsier, Auburn
  • Midfielder: Meggie Dougherty Howard, Florida
  • Midfielder: Chelsea Drennan, South Carolina
  • Defender: Kiana Clarke, Auburn
  • Defender: Gabby Seiler, Florida
  • Defender: Paige Bendell, South Carolina
  • Defender: Kaleigh Kurtz, South Carolina
  • Goalkeeper: Mikayla Krzeczowski, South Carolina
  • At-Large: Marion Crowder, Georgia
  • At-Large: Melanie Donaldson, Missouri
  • Forward: Mallory Eubanks, Mississippi State
  • Forward: Sarah Luebbert, Missouri
  • Forward: Sophie Groff, South Carolina
  • Forward: Haley Pounds, Texas A&M
  • Midfielder: Brooke Ramsier, Auburn
  • Midfielder: Summer Clarke, LSU
  • Midfielder: Gretchen Harknett, Ole Miss
  • Midfielder: Kaitlyn Clark, Missouri
  • Midfielder: Rylie O'Keefe, Tennessee
  • Defender: Jessi Hartzler, Arkansas
  • Defender: Qyara Winston, Arkansas
  • Defender: Caroline Waters, Georgia
  • Defender: Lauren Selaiden, Missouri
  • Goalkeeper: Sarah Le Beau, Auburn
  • Goalkeeper: Danielle Rice, Texas A&M
  • At-Large: Kristen Cardano, Florida
  • At-Large: Cristina DeZeeuw, Vanderbilt
  • Stefani Doyle, Arkansas
  • Kayla McKeon, Arkansas
  • Bri Folds, Auburn
  • Karli Gutsche, Auburn
  • Julia Lester, Florida
  • Marissa Bosco, Kentucky
  • Evangeline Soucie, Kentucky
  • Sarah Luebbert, Missouri
  • Mikayla Krzeczowski, South Carolina
  • Maya Neal, Tennessee
  • Grace Piper, Texas A&M
  • Grace Jackson, Vanderbilt

See also

References

  1. ^ Southeastern Conference. "2016 SEC Soccer awards announced". Retrieved July 2, 2017.