Harman Patil (Editor)

Florida Gators women's soccer

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University
  
University of Florida

Nickname
  
Florida Gators

League
  
Division I (NCAA)

Ground
  
James G. Pressly Stadium

Colors
  
Blue, Orange

Location
  
Gainesville, FL

Head coach
  
Becky Burleigh

Conference
  
Southeastern Conference

Date founded
  
1995

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Profiles

The Florida Gators women's soccer team represents the University of Florida in the sport of college soccer. The Gators compete in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) and the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They play their home games in James G. Pressly Stadium on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus, and are led by head coach Becky Burleigh. In the first sixteen years of the Gators' soccer program, they won thirteen SEC championships and one NCAA national championship.

Contents

History

Becky Burleigh was named the first head coach of the start-up Florida Gators soccer program on June 28, 1994, and has served as the only head coach in the program's history. Since the Gators' began play in the fall of 1995, the team has compiled a record of 264–70–23 and a winning percentage of 0.7717, and Burleigh's Gators teams have qualified for the NCAA Tournament thirteen of the last fifteen seasons.

In 1998, in the Gators soccer program's fourth year of existence, the Gators won their first NCAA national title by defeating the defending national champion North Carolina Tar Heels 1–0 in the final game of the tournament. The 1998 Gators finished 26–1, having lost their only match to the same North Carolina team that the Gators defeated in the NCAA championship final. Players from the Gators' 1998 national championship team included All-Americans Erin Baxter, Danielle Fotopoulos and Heather Mitts.

In addition to their 1998 national championship season, the Gators have advanced to the NCAA tournament semi-final once (2001), the quarter-finals twice (1996, 2003), and the round of sixteen four times (2006, 2007, 2008, 2012).

The Gators play in the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference. In conference play, the Gators teams have won ten SEC championships, and eight SEC tournament titles, leading all other SEC teams since the Florida soccer team began play in 1995. Most recently, the Gators won the SEC championship (regular season) again in 2010, and qualified for the NCAA women's soccer tournament for the eighth consecutive year. In 2009, the Gators advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament before losing to Oregon State. The Gators finished their 2009 season 8–1–2 in the SEC, and 16–6–2 overall.

First-team All-Americans

The following Florida soccer players have been named first-team All-Americans:

  • Erin Baxter (1997)
  • Danielle Fotopoulos (1998)
  • Heather Mitts (1999)
  • Abby Wambach (1999, 2001)
  • Melanie Booth (2005)
  • Erika Tymrak (2012)
  • Christen Westphal (2015)
  • Savannah Jordan (2015)
  • Internationals and professionals

  • Former All-American Danielle Fotopoulos was a member of the U.S. National Team (1996–2005), and played on the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup championship team.
  • Abby Wambach and Heather Mitts won the gold medal with the United States in women's soccer at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, and Mitts won the gold medal again at the 2008 games in Beijing. Both Wambach and Mitts were members of the U.S. runner-up team in the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, while Wambach captained the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup winning team.
  • Former All-American Melanie Booth has been a member of the Canada National Team since 2001, and was a member of Canada's FIFA Women's World Cup team in (2007).
  • Danielle Murphy played for the England National Team from 1998 to 2003, and was the youngest-ever member of England's FIFA Women's World Cup team.
  • Erika Tymrak was named National Women's Soccer League Rookie of the Year in 2013 and won two titles with FC Kansas City, in 2014 and 2014.
  • Christen Westphal was the third overall selection in the 2016 NWSL College Draft, taken by the Boston Breakers in the first round. She joined fellow former Gators Tymrak, Adriana Leon, Lauren Silver, Havana Solaun and Kat Williamson in the league.
  • Coaching staff

    Becky Burleigh became the first and only head coach of the Florida Gators soccer program on June 28, 1994. Since then, she has compiled a record of 319–85–27 in fifteen seasons as the Gators' head coach. Prior to coaching at Florida, Burleigh was the head coach at Berry College, where her Lady Fury teams won two NAIA national championships. At Florida and Berry, Burleigh has compiled an overall record of 346–93–29, with a winning percentage of 0.7703. She ranks fourth in total number of wins, and fifth in winning percentage, among all active Division I women's soccer coaches.

    Victor Campbell has served as the Gators' associate head coach for the past nine seasons, after serving as an assistant coach for the previous eight seasons. He primarily coaches the forwards and attacking midfielders. Campbell had been an assistant at Methodist College for seven seasons.

    Alan Kirkup is the Gators' assistant coach, joining the team after having been the head coach for Southern Methodist University, the University of Maryland and the University of Arkansas. Before he began his U.S. collegiate coaching career, Kirkup was a professional soccer player for Manchester United Football Club.

    James G. Pressly Stadium

    The Florida Gators soccer team plays its home games in James G. Pressly Stadium. Pressly Stadium is a dual-purpose facility serving as home to the soccer team and the men's and women's outdoor track & field teams. It is a lighted stadium and has a seating capacity of approximately 4,500. The stadium is named for James G. Pressly, a 1972 alumnus of the University of Florida College of Law, who made a generous contribution to have the facility upgraded for Division I play.

    The Gators soccer team also has the exclusive use of a soccer practice field that was completed as part of the Florida Lacrosse Facility in 2009.

    References

    Florida Gators women's soccer Wikipedia