W-D-L: 2-2-3 4-1-3
September 15, 2013
1:00 pm @ Rice University, Houston
In the college sports universe, Louisiana State University commands a mystique with few peers. When talking about elite programs, LSU seems to come up in several different sports conversations, not excluding the all holy American football. One sport in particular where the Tigers have dominated in overwhelming fashion is women's track and field. Since 1987, LSU has captured the national track and field championship 11 times indoors and 14 times outdoors, including an entire decade straight. No other school comes anywhere close. Whether this has any bearing on the performance of their soccer team can be the stuff of another conversation, but last Friday the Tigers used the speed of a national powerhouse track team to beat the Rice Owls on their own turf.
Usually the ones outpacing their opponents, Rice met their match on Sunday. Both teams possessing so much speed and quickness, with four players on the pitch that saw action at the U-20 or U-17 World Cups, this game was bound to be end-to-end, full of close chances and exchanges of near misses, the score even until the 70th minute. Keeping the crowd constantly on the edge of our seats, it took a goal-mouth melee in which the ball bounced from head to head before LSU senior Alex Ramsey made the final contact for somebody to finally get on the board. Inevitably, the game at such a breakneck pace, it was LSU who prevailed by sharing the ball more evenly. Better ball distribution allowed the Tigers to keep their edge over the Owls as the game wore on, and their effective coverage of the flanks where they had a speed advantage neutralized the Owls' wings, forcing Rice to take most of their drives up the middle. That's a lot of work for their center-fielders. In the crucial final minutes, Rice couldn't muster up the speed to get to the ball. Where was the Owls' 12th Woman? I was thinking to myself (see my blog entry dated September 14, 2013). The LSU cheering section, though fewer in number, were the only voices I could hear egging their team on the entire game. The Owls could have used a little of that profile-page-chanting this afternoon.
Lauren Hughes (7) gains alot of yardage for the Owls. Speed is the key factor in this matchup. |
Addie Eggleston graduated from The Kinkaid School in Houston. LSU's starting 11 includes four products of greater Houston-area high schools. |
Attacking defender Addie Eggleston (2) faces up against Kelsey Rightmer (20)... |
...makes a move... |
...and bursts past her... |
...to deliver a lethal cross at full speed. |
Always the smartest and hardest-working player on the field, Quinney Truong (21) slices through the center. |
Ashton Geisendorff (16) gets physical with Fernanda Piña (7) to win the ball. |
Holly Hargreaves (12) takes some space against Alex Arlitt (14), who lettered at Clear Lake High School in Clear Creek, one of the school districts within the greater Houston landscape. |
Keeper Amy Czyz (00) and the Rice defense weathers the LSU pressure for a majority of time. |
The ball bounces off numerous heads in a goal-mouth melee that produces the only score of the afternoon. |
Down by a goal, the Owls press. Gracie Campbell (23) stretches to force Danielle Spriggs's shot (19) off-target. |
Nina Anderson (21) outraces the Rice defense on a breakaway to force Amy Czyz (00) to make a spectacular save. |
(All photos by Kokoy Severino.)
It is ironic to me that Rice, the leading institution of higher learning in the fourth largest city in the country, which recruits athletes from all over the world, with not a single locally-produced player, was beaten by a university from a neighboring state with one-third of its starting lineup comprised of graduates from Houston-area high schools, namely Tori Sample and Alex Arlitt (Clear Lake HS), senior keeper Megan Kinneman (Elkins), and attacking defender Addie Eggleston (Kinkaid), all of whom made critical contributions to the outcome of the game. In that sense, LSU had more of a home-field advantage than Rice did, despite the distance from Baton Rouge.
UPCOMING MATCHES OF THE WEEK:
Sunday Sep 15 U of H (#126) @ Houston Baptist University (#205) 7:00 pm
Sunday Sep 22 Howard University (#310) vs Prairie View A&M University (#303) @ TSU 1:30 pm
Sunday Sep 22 South Carolina State University (#292) @ TSU 7:00 pm
Friday Sep 27 Northwestern State University (#260) @ HBU* 7:00 pm
Sunday Sep 29 Vanderbilt University (#114) @ Texas A&M University (#15)* 2:30 pm in College Station
Thursday Oct 3 University of Cincinnati (#227) @ U of H* 7:00 pm
Friday Oct 11 TSU @ Prairie View A&M University (#303)* 7:00 pm
Friday Oct 18 Oral Roberts University (#124) @ HBU* 5:00 pm
Friday Oct 18 Colorado College (#50) @ Rice* 7:00 pm
Sunday Oct 20 Mississippi Valley State University (#275) @ TSU* 1:00 pm
Thursday Oct 24 University of Central Florida (#20) @ U of H* 7:00 pm
Friday Oct 25 Grambling State University (#322) @ TSU* 7:00 pm
Saturday Oct 26 University of Texas-Tyler @ Concordia* 5:00 pm at St. Stephen's HS, Austin
Sunday Oct 27 East Carolina University (#97) @ Rice* 1:00 pm
Thursday Oct 31 LSU @ Tx A&M* 7:00 pm in College Station
Friday Nov 1 Sam Houston State University (#233) @ HBU* 5:00 pm
Monday Nov 4 Conference USA Tournament Quarter-Finals* @ Rice
Wednesday Nov 6 Conference USA Tournament Quarter-Finals* @ Rice
Thursday Nov 7 Southwestern Athletic Conference Tournament* @ Houston Amateur Sports Park
Friday Nov 8 Conference USA Tournament Semi-Finals* @ Rice
Friday Nov 8 Red River Athletic Conference Tournament* @ Houston Amateur Sports Park
Saturday Nov 9 Southwestern Athletic Conference Tournament* @ Houston Amateur Sports Park
Saturday Nov 9 Red River Athletic Conference Tournament* @ Houston Amateur Sports Park
Sunday Nov 10 Conference USA Tournament Final* @ Rice
(Kokoy's Matches of the Week are those which I plan to attend.)
Kokoy Severino has been coaching junior high school soccer in the public school system of the Greater Houston area for 19 years. He holds a National Youth Diploma from the National Soccer Coaches Association of America, two coaching certifications from the United States Soccer Federation, and a Master in Educational Leadership degree from the University of St. Thomas in Houston, Texas. His research focuses on the relationship between interscholastic competitive soccer and the academic success of at-risk students. He returns regularly to his native country of the Philippines and conducts soccer training sessions for economically disadvantaged youths.
"This blog is to document the intensity, the depth, the passion, the strategic and tactical nuances, the stars, the spectacular play that I witness in the women's teams at the college level. And in doing so, it is my hope that others might be inspired to discover for themselves the beautiful game brought by the women." (Kokoy, from blog entry dated Nov 4, 2012)
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