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South Florida Bulls women's soccer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South Florida Bulls
women's soccer
Founded1995; 29 years ago (1995)
UniversityUniversity of South Florida
Athletic directorMichael Kelly
Head coachChris Brown (1st season)
ConferenceThe American
LocationTampa, Florida
StadiumCorbett Stadium
(Capacity: 4,000)
NicknameBulls
ColorsGreen and gold[1]
   
Home
Away
NCAA Tournament Round of 16
2019
NCAA Tournament Round of 32
2010, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020
NCAA Tournament appearances
2010, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020
Conference Tournament championships
2017, 2019, 2020
Conference Regular Season championships
1998, 2018, 2020, 2021

The South Florida Bulls women's soccer team represents the University of South Florida in the sport of soccer. The Bulls currently compete in the American Athletic Conference within Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The Bulls play in Corbett Stadium along with USF's men's soccer team, which opened in 2011. Prior to that, they played at what is now the USF Track and Field Stadium.

The Bulls have reached the NCAA tournament seven times and have won seven combined regular season and tournament conference championships.

History

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T. Logan Fleck era (1995–2006)

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USF's women's soccer team was founded in 1995, exactly 30 years after the men's soccer team began play as the first sports team in USF history.[2] The first women's soccer coach in USF history was T. Logan Fleck, who also served as USF's men's soccer coach from 1994 to 1996. The program got off to a good start under Fleck and went 11–3 in its first season, including nine shutouts.[3] The inaugural team contained no scholarship players and mainly played Division II opponents, but still defeated three Division I teams.[4]

The team then entered a rough patch after joining the rest of USF's sports teams in Conference USA in 1996, finishing 6–11–1 overall and 2–7 against in conference opponents.[5] The Bulls turned it around and won the regular season C-USA title in just their third season in the conference and fourth season of existence going 9–0–2 against conference foes and 15–1–3 overall, but lost to Marquette in the Conference USA tournament championship game. The Bulls would never again come near a Conference USA championship, falling as low as 1–8–1 in conference games in 2001 and leaving for the Big East in 2005. Fleck was fired following the Bulls 2006 campaign finishing 6–10–1.

Denise Schilte-Brown era (2006–present)

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Denise Schilte-Brown was hired to replace T. Logan Fleck as the Bulls head coach in December 2006.[6] But USF continued to struggle in the Big East, finishing with a winning record against conference foes just three times.[7] USF made the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 2010 after a 11–4–3 regular season and reaching the Big East Tournament Championship game where they fell to West Virginia 1–0.[8] The Bulls won their first ever NCAA Tournament game by upsetting highly favored Auburn 3–1 in the first round then fell to No. 2 seed Florida State 2–1 in round two.[9]

After the Big East Conference realignment in the early 2010s, USF became a member of the American Athletic Conference starting in the 2013 season. The Bulls quickly found success in their new conference behind goalkeeper Christiane Endler by making the semifinals of the 2013 conference tournament. In 2014, the Bulls made the AAC tournament championship game, which they lost on penalty kicks 3–2.[10] The Bulls appeared in the NCAA tournament for the second time in program history but fell in the first round. USF went to the AAC Tournament Championship game again in 2015, but lost the championship game on penalty kicks for the second year in a row. Also for the second straight year, the Bulls had a first round exit in the 2015 NCAA tournament. In 2017, USF finished second in the conference during the regular season to arch rival Central Florida and the two would go on to meet in the AAC tournament championship game. There, the Bulls finally exorcised their championship game demons and won 5–3 on penalty kicks for their first ever conference tournament championship.[11] This gave USF their first autobid to the NCAA tournament in program history. The Bulls won their first-round game in the tournament 3–0 against FGCU but were eliminated with a 1–0 loss to No. 3 Florida in the second round.

Bulls forward Évelyne Viens takes on two Cincinnati Bearcats defenders in 2019.

USF followed their conference tournament championship with a regular season conference title and appearance in the 2018 AAC tournament championship, but lost to Memphis 3–0. They returned to the NCAA tournament where they beat Albany 5–1 in the first round before losing 3–1 to eventual national champion Florida State. The Bulls and Memphis switched their conference results the next season, with USF coming in second to undefeated Memphis in the regular season then defeating the Tigers in the 2019 conference tournament. In the NCAA tournament, USF upset Florida 4–2 in the first round, then shut out No. 4 Washington 2–0 to win a team record 16 games for the season and reach the Round of 16 for the first time, where they were defeated 2–1 by No. 1 seed Florida State, being eliminated by the Seminoles for the second year in a row. Senior Évelyne Viens was named to the second team all-American list.[12]

In the 2020 season, which was delayed until the spring of 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Bulls finished with their first undefeated regular season in program history with a 7–0–2 record, winning the regular season conference title for the second time in three seasons. Dubbed by local media and fans as "The InvinciBulls" (a play on the nickname given to Arsenal F.C. when they won the Premier League unbeaten in 2003–04), the 2020 Bulls had five members of the team named to the first team all-conference list.[13] They won the conference tournament for the third time in four years and won it on home turf for the first time in program history to clinch a spot in their seventh NCAA tournament.[14] They were beaten in the second round by No. 7 Texas A&M.

In 2021, the Bulls won the regular season AAC crown again, making it five straight years of them winning either the regular season or tournament conference title.[15] They lost to Memphis on penalty kicks in the conference tournament title game, but were still selected for the NCAA tournament. They fell in the first round of the tournament to NC State.[16]

Schilte-Brown left the Bulls after the 2023 season (in which the Bulls won the AAC East Division) to become the coach of Tampa's newly founded USL Super League club Tampa Bay Sun FC.[17] Her husband Chris, who served as USF's associate head coach and formerly coached VCU's women's soccer team took over as head coach beginning in 2024.[18]

Season-by-season results

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Year Conference Games played Record
(W–L–T)
Win percentage Conference record
(W–L–T)
Head coach Postseason
1995 Independent 14 11–3–0 .786 N/A T. Logan Fleck
1996 Conference USA 18 6–11–1 .361 2–7–0
1997 17 10–6–1 .618 4–4–1
1998 19 15–1–3 .868 9–0–2 (Won conference regular season)
1999 19 11–8–0 .579 7–4–0
2000 17 6–10–1 .382 4–6–1
2001 19 4–13–2 .263 1–8–1
2002 18 8–8–2 .500 4–4–2
2003 18 8–8–2 .500 6–3–1
2004 16 5–9–2 .375 4–6–0
2005 Big East 17 7–7–3 .500 2–6–3
2006 17 6–10–1 .382 3–8–0
2007 17 4–10–3 .324 3–6–2 Denise Schilte-Brown
2008 18 7–8–3 .472 3–7–1
2009 20 9–8–3 .525 6–4–2
2010 23 14–6–3 .674 6–3–2 NCAA Round of 32
2011 18 6–8–4 .444 2–6–3
2012 19 10–5–4 .632 6–2–2
2013 American Athletic Conference 20 10–4–6 .650 4–3–2
2014 22 13–7–2 .636 6–3–0 (Won conference regular season) NCAA first round
2015 22 15–4–3 .750 6–2–1 NCAA first round
2016 19 12–4–3 .711 4–3–2
2017 19 13–4–2 .737 7–1–1 (Won conference tournament) NCAA round of 32
2018 18 15–3–0 .833 8–1–0 (Won conference regular season) NCAA round of 32
2019 21 16–5–0 .762 7–2–0 (Won conference tournament) NCAA round of 16
2020 13 10–1–2 .946 6–0–1 (Won conference regular season and tournament) NCAA round of 32
2021 19 12–4–3 .711 6–1–1 (Won conference regular season) NCAA first round
2022 17 8–9–0 .471 5–3–0
2023 18 10–6–2 .611 6–1–2
Total 532 281–190–61 .586 198–85–46 23 Appearances (12–20–6 record)
Bold indicates tournament won
Italics indicate conference championship

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Awards and recognition

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Players

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Olympians

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Four USF women's soccer players have competed in the Olympics. Évelyne Viens became the first USF alum in any sport to win an Olympic medal when Canada won gold in 2020.

All Americans

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First team all-conference

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  • Kristine Edner, 1996
  • Kristine Edner, 1997
  • Janeen Sobush, 1998
  • Tia Opliger, 1998
  • Kristine Edner, 1998
  • Siri Nordby, 1999
  • Siri Nordby, 2000
  • Tia Opliger, 2002
  • Katie Reed, 2003
  • Breck Bankester, 2004
  • Tia Opliger, 2004
  • Lindsey Brauer, 2006
  • Chelsea Klotz, 2010
  • Taylor Patterson, 2012
  • Jackie Simpson, 2013
  • Sharla Passariello, 2013
  • Demi Stokes, 2014
  • Leticia Skeete, 2014
  • Jackie Simpson, 2014
  • Olivia Chance, 2015
  • Grace Adams, 2016
  • Kelli Burney, 2017
  • Évelyne Viens, 2017
  • Kat Elliot, 2017
  • Kelli Burney, 2018
  • Évelyne Viens, 2018
  • Évelyne Viens, 2019
  • Andrea Hauksdottir, 2019
  • Sydney Martinez, 2019
  • Sydny Nasello, 2019
  • Sydny Nasello, 2020
  • Chyanne Dennis, 2020
  • Vivianne Bessette, 2020
  • Sydney Martinez, 2020
  • Chiara Hahn, 2020
  • Sydny Nasello, 2021
  • Chyanne Dennis, 2021
  • Vivianne Bessette, 2021

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Conference player of the year

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Goalkeeper
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  • Sydney Martinez, 2020

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Defensive
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Midfielder
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  • Andrea Hauksdottir, 2018
  • Andrea Hauksdottir, 2019

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Offensive
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  • Évelyne Viens, 2018
  • Évelyne Viens, 2019
  • Sydny Nasello, 2020
  • Sydny Nasello, 2021

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Coaches

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Conference coach of the year

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  • T. Logan Fleck (1998)
  • Denise Schlite-Brown (2018)
  • Denise Schlite-Brown (2020)

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Media

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Under the current American Athletic Conference TV deal, all home and in-conference away women's soccer games are shown on one of the various ESPN networks or streamed live on ESPN+.[22] Live radio broadcasts of games are also available worldwide for free on the Bulls Unlimited digital radio station on TuneIn.[23]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ USF Athletics Brand Guide (PDF). August 18, 2022. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
  2. ^ "2019 Quick Facts (PDF)" (PDF). USF Athletics. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  3. ^ "Record Book (PDF)" (PDF). USF Athletics. Retrieved 2021-04-15.
  4. ^ "T. Logan Fleck – Head Coach – Staff Directory". USF Athletics. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  5. ^ "Record Book (PDF)" (PDF). USF Athletics. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  6. ^ "Denise Schilte-Brown – Strength & Conditioning". USF Athletics. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  7. ^ "Record Book (PDF)" (PDF). USF Athletics. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  8. ^ "West Virginia Wins BIG EAST Women's Soccer Championship 1–0 Over USF". www.bigeast.com. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  9. ^ "2010 NCAA women's soccer tournament schedule, results". ESPN.com. 2010-11-11. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  10. ^ "2014 Women's Soccer Championship Central". theamerican.org. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  11. ^ "No. 23 USF Wins American Athletic Conference Championship With 2–0 Victory Over No. 8 Memphis". USF Athletics. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  12. ^ "Final 2021 Media Guide (PDF)" (PDF). USF Athletics. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
  13. ^ "The American Announces 2020 Women's Soccer Honors". theamerican.org. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
  14. ^ "USF Defends Women's Soccer Championship with 4-0 Win over Cincinnati". theamerican.org. Retrieved 2021-04-18.
  15. ^ "USF Clinches American Athletic Conference Regular-Season Title, Pushes Streak to Five Straight Seasons with Conference Championship". USF Athletics. Retrieved 2021-10-29.
  16. ^ "USF's Season Ends in NCAA First Round". USF Athletics. Retrieved 2021-11-15.
  17. ^ "USF's Denise Schilte-Brown to lead Tampa Bay USL Super League team". SoccerWire. Retrieved 2023-12-15.
  18. ^ "Chris Brown Named Head Coach For USF Women's Soccer". USF Athletics. 2023-11-30. Retrieved 2023-12-15.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h "Final 2021 Media Guide (PDF)" (PDF). USF Athletics. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
  20. ^ a b c "Four Former USF Women's Soccer Players Named to Olympic Rosters for Tokyo Games". USF Athletics. Retrieved 2021-07-13.
  21. ^ Davidson, Neil (23 June 2021). "Canadian women's soccer team roster revealed for Tokyo Games". CBC.
  22. ^ "AAC, ESPN Agree To 12-Year Media-Rights Deal Worth $1B". www.sportsbusinessjournal.com. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  23. ^ "Bulls Unlimited". USF Athletics. Retrieved 2022-11-18.
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