Kentucky Wildcats men's club soccer | |
---|---|
University | University of Kentucky |
Conference | NIRSA |
NIRSA | Region II |
Location | Lexington, Kentucky |
First year | 1964 |
Nickname | Wildcats |
Colors | Blue and White [1] |
Website | Official website |
23-24 season |
The Kentucky Wildcats men's club soccer team, also known as UKMCS, is an intercollegiate club soccer team representing the University of Kentucky (UK). The club team is considered a non-varsity sport, meaning funding is comparatively limited and in turn requires most of the funds to be raised internally. Currently, UKMCS is a member of NIRSA's Southeast Collegiate Soccer Alliance.
Men's soccer at the University of Kentucky can be traced back to 1964, when Dr. Abdelmonem Rizk, a physical education professor at UK, formed an organized soccer team of UK students with the intention of eventually creating a varsity soccer team. Two years later, in 1966, Rizk started the first SEC Tournament which was held in Knoxville where Kentucky finished third. The following year, Kentucky were SEC champions. [2] [3] [4]
As the game grew in popularity, Rizk decided to split the pool of players into five separate teams: the main/highest level "A" team, the lower-level "B" or "JV" team, the "Graduate" team of all graduate students, the "Persia" team of mostly foreign students, and the women's team, which was formed for the first time in 1979. Unable to coach five separate teams, Rizk became the broader "head of the soccer program" and allowed the all non-A teams to be self-organized. In 1976, Rizk appointed David Mossbrook to be the head coach of the main A-team, but due to lack of funding Mossbrook operated as a volunteer like Rizk. Mossbrook would go on to coach for 11 years until 1987, only having a season below .500 in 1983 when they went 10-11. After Mossbrook departed, Sam Wooten would take over. Despite the club's success and following all NCAA regulations, UK still wouldn't obtain varsity status until 3 years after Mossbrook left. [3] [5] [6] [7]
On December 10, 1990, 26 years after Rizk's first team, the University of Kentucky voted to alleviate soccer from a club to a varsity sport, meaning the team would be able to get the funding it needed and would be able to compete against other collegiate varsity teams. The upgrade to UK's varsity team meant the "club team" would dissolve due to a majority of players, including coach Sam Wooten who would coach until 1994, would shift to play with the varsity team. Having fulfilled his ultimate goal, Rizk, the head of soccer since 1964, would step away from the team after the 1990 season and retire from the university in 1992. [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]
Despite having a full varsity team, many students who didn't want to deal with the time and physical commitment needed for a varsity athlete, but wanted to play soccer at a high level felt that the old club soccer method was a great solution. This led to the re-creation of a separate club soccer team in 1995. However, now that Lexington had an NCAA DI varsity soccer team, it became much more difficult to convince outside entities to volunteer as a coach, meaning the team would be player-coached. [13]
The following year, in 1996, Kentucky would participate in the first of what would be a regular tournament for them called Clemson's Socctoberfest in Clemson, SC. It's known they competed in at least the first 8 editions of the competition and advanced from the group stage for the first time in 2000 where they lost in the quarterfinals to Virginia Tech. [14] [15] [16] [17]
In 2002, UK would join the SCSL, a NIRSA affiliated league, meaning they would have a consistent pool of teams to play against and would be able to travel to Tupelo, Mississippi where all league members were invited to compete in a regional tournament. This year also saw them win their first Clemson Socctoberfest. The following year, in 2003, UK would have its best regional tournament performance by advancing to the semifinals where they would lose to Mississippi State, who had previously beat them in the quarterfinals of the Clemson Socctoberfest. UK would end the season being ranked 2nd in the region, but would not receive a bid to the 2003 national championship in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. [18] [19] [20]
In 2005, the SCSL folded. Luckily, NIRSA's other Region II-affiliated league, later known as the Southeast Collegiate Soccer Alliance (SCSA), would allow all SCSL teams to join, including UK who accepted the offer. Unlike the SCSL who invited all their members to compete in the regional tournament, the regional tournament for the SCSA was invite-only due to them having more members. UK were unable to qualify for the regional tournament again until 2014 when they became Mountain West divisional champions. After the first round of games in Winston-Salem, rain would see all remaining group stage matches cancelled meaning all 16 teams would advance to the knockout round. UK would beat Georgia College 3-2 in extra time but would lose to eventual finalist, UCF, in the quarterfinals. This would be UK's best SCSA seasonal performance but still would not qualify for the 2014 national tournament. The following year, in 2015, despite only losing one regular season game, UK would not qualify for the regional tournament. [21]
Kentucky would participate in the SCSA until 2019 when two forfeits in the 2018 regular season caused by a lack of players forced them to be removed from the league. The following year, UK would play against local teams as an independent club, similar to how they operated from 1995-2002, but the COVID-19 pandemic would all but see the team dissolve due to restrictions regarding in-person interactions that were in effect for over a year. [22]
Despite them being unable to meet in person, a small group of players would help keep the team's affiliation with the university and in 2021 were allowed to resume in-person activities. UK would rejoin NIRSA's SCSA this season, but due to them being removed in the 2018 season, they would have to be "associate" members for a year, meaning they would have to display the ability to play in 3 matches against NIRSA-affiliated opponents without the assistance of the league scheduling games. Being associate members also meant UK would be ineligible for the regional and national tournament. UK would successfully accomplish this goal, meaning the following year they'd once again be full NIRSA and SCSA members. The 2021 season saw UK advance to the semifinals of Clemson's Socctoberfest tournament despite losing their first group stage match to hosts Clemson “A” and tying their second match against Auburn. [23]
In their first season back as full NIRSA members in the fall of 2022, UK would tie their first 2 regular season games but would go on to win their next four, which would be enough for them to become Mountain North divisional champions and automatically qualify for the 2022 SCSA Regional Tournament, their first regional tournament appearance in eight years. The tournament was hosted at ECU's NRC in Greenville, NC. This year also saw them, once again, advance to the semifinals of Clemson's Socctoberfest tournament, despite losing their first group stage match to in-state rival Louisville on a last second kick and tying their second match against UNC-C 1-1.
BYU Cougars men's soccer is an American soccer team based in Provo, Utah, United States. The club has won nine NIRSA national championships, and it is the only university sponsored soccer program to have ever purchased a franchise, competing in the Premier Development League from 2003 to 2017. It has since returned to club competition, and the team plays its home games at The Stadium at South Field on the campus of Brigham Young University. The team's colors are dark blue and white.
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The 2023-24 Kentucky Wildcats men's club soccer team represented the University of Kentucky as a part of the Mountain North division of the Southeast Collegiate Soccer Alliance (SCSA), one of six national regions formed to help determine bids to the NIRSA National Soccer Championships. The team played its home games in Lexington, Kentucky and will played against other non-varsity collegiate teams across the country.
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