
Ohio Wesleyan 1, Messiah 0
Nov. 30, 2002
GENEVA,
N.Y. -- Junior forward Erika Howland (Terrace Park/Mariemont) scored midway
through the first half and the Ohio Wesleyan defense made it stand up
as the Battling Bishop women's soccer team defeated Messiah in the NCAA
Division III championship game on Saturday at Artificial Turf Stadium
on the campus of Hobart and William Smith Colleges.
The national championship was the second in a row for Ohio Wesleyan, making
the Bishops the first team to repeat as NCAA Division III champion since
the University of California at San Diego in 1995-97. The win also extended
the Battling Bishops' NCAA Division III-record winning streak to 45 straight
games. The shutout was Ohio Wesleyan's 20th of the season. The Bishops
did not allow a goal during their 5-game march to the national championship.
Howland
put the Bishops on the scoreboard with 21:15 left in the first half. Ohio
Wesleyan had earned a corner kick and sophomore defender Toni Frissora
(Columbus/Westerville South) sent the ball into the box from the right
side. The ball came down near the right post into a crowd where senior
midfielder Lindsey Bland (Columbus/Hilliard Darby) nudged it out to freshman
midfielder Sarah Wall (Columbus/Upper Arlington), who tapped the ball
over to Howland near the left post. Howland buried the shot into the open
net to put the Bishops ahead to stay.
"It
was just kind of bouncing around, they didn't clear it and then we didn't
get a shot off," Howland said. "I have one run that I make and
kind of clean up anything and it just happened to come by that way. I
just had it right front of me and I had an open goal."
Messiah's Erin Benedict had the first scoring chance of the game, but
her shot at the 10:58 mark sailed high.
That
was it for the Falcons in the first half, as the Bishops had the edge
in midfield play for most of the rest of the period.
Howland had a chance to give the Bishops a 2-0 lead on a crossing pass
from senior forward Emily Bayer (Medina), but the ball skipped by before
Howland could get a shot off with an open look at the goal. Later, Howland
crossed the ball to Wall, but Messiah keeper Maggie Futato made the save
on Wall's shot.
Wall
had another good shot with 13:20 left in the half, but her shot from a
crowd hit the crossbar and went over.
The first half ended with Ohio Wesleyan outshooting the Falcons, 6-1,
but Bishop head coach Bob Barnes was not concerned. "I think with
the talent we have up front and the midfield, we've only been held scoreless
one game in the last two seasons, so I felt we could create some opportunities.
I knew Messiah was an outstanding team and figured it was going to be
a one-goal game, and we usually don't give up too many opportunities defensively,
so as long as we could eke one out and stand tough on the defense, I felt
we were in good shape."
Benedict had the Falcons' best chance to score in the second half, winding
up from near the top of the box but seeing her shot go wide left with
16:13 left in regulation time.
With the time winding down, Messiah played forward and put more pressure
on the Bishop defense, but Ohio Wesleyan kept the Falcons off the scoreboard.
The
Falcons had a restart with 14:05 left in the game, sending the ball into
the box, but senior Mindy Hammond (Columbus/DeSales) smothered the ball
on the right side. Messiah served the ball into the box again 2 minutes
later, but was not able to get off a shot.
Hammond covered another entry pass with 10:57 left in regulation time,
and Messiah had another restart from about 30 yards away with 9:03 to
play, but the Falcons were not able to get off a shot.
Ohio Wesleyan threatened to put the game on ice when Wall made a run in
from the left side, but her shot toward the left post was saved, as was
a follow shot by Howland.
While Hammond was not credited with a save in the game, there was no denying
the importance of her defensive play. She was named the Defensive Most
Valuable Player of the tournament by the NCAA Division III women's soccer
committee.
"Nothing really was a hard shot on goal, it was just being knocked
into the 18 box and I just had to clean it up in there," Hammond
said.
"Mindy cleaned up a couple nice balls in the box, which is one of
her strengths that don't appear in the stat book in the sense of cutting
down crosses and coming out on the 1-on-1," said Barnes.
"Our
game plan was to keep control of the ball and I think for the most part
during the game we kept great control of the ball," Howland said.
"Liz (Sheehan) and Deb (Lochner) did a great job in the middle, and
Mindy stepped it up huge in the goal."
After scoring the game-winning goal in the championship game and contributing
a goal and an assist in Friday's semifinal game, Howland was named the
tournament's Offensive Most Valuable Player.
Hammond and Howland were joined on the all-tournament team by junior forward
Liz Sheehan (Westerville/South) and Wall.
Ohio Wesleyan outshot Messiah, 13-3. Futato finished with 8 saves in the
Falcon goal.
The
Falcons, who had won their first 23 games on the way to the national championship
game for the first time, finished the season with a 23-1 record.
"I think the difference was Ohio Wesleyan had great speed up front
and just very physically strong to the ball," said Messiah coach
Scott Frey. "I thought (the game) was very evenly matched but as
time went on, their strength and size started to wear us down a little
bit. We're a bit banged up at this point, but everyone is this time of
season, everybody has bumps and bruises and I'm not sure we could go as
deep as we would have liked to. Overall, they're a good team and you can
see why they are where they are."
Ohio
Wesleyan finished the season with a 24-0 record.
"I think it's just unbelievable what the (team has) accomplished,
going through an undefeated season," Barnes said. "Winning it
twice in a row is just absolutely surreal. I feel great for the upperclassmen
that have done incredible things from starting their career winning 19
games in a row and then they finish it off by winning 45 straight."
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