2019 America East Conference Women's Soccer Tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2019 America East Conference Women's Soccer Tournament
ClassificationDivision I
Teams6
Matches5
Attendance943
SiteCampus Sites (Higher Seed)
ChampionsStony Brook (3rd title)
Winning coachTobias Bischof (1st title)
MVPErin O'Connor (Stony Brook)
BroadcastAmerica East TV
America East Conference Women's Soccer Tournament
«2018  »
2019 America East Conference women's soccer standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T   PCT W   L   T   PCT
Stony Brook  ‍y 6 1 1   .813 14 6 1   .690
Albany  ‍‍‍ 6 1 1   .813 9 6 3   .583
Hartford  ‍‍‍ 5 2 1   .688 10 7 2   .579
New Hampshire  ‍‍‍ 5 3 0   .625 10 8 0   .556
Binghamton  ‍‍‍ 4 3 1   .563 10 6 2   .611
UMass Lowell  ‍‍‍ 3 4 1   .438 4 11 2   .294
Vermont  ‍‍‍ 1 6 2   .222 3 10 3   .281
Maine  ‍‍‍ 1 6 1   .188 5 8 1   .393
UMBC  ‍‍‍ 1 7 0   .125 2 13 2   .176
† – Conference champion
‡ – 2019 America East Tournament champion
y – Invited to the NCAA Tournament
As of December 9, 2019; Rankings from United Soccer Coaches Poll
Source:America East Conference

The 2019 America East Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the America East Conference held from November 3 through November 10, 2019. The five-match tournament took place at campus sites, with the higher seed hosting. The six-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The defending champions were the Albany Great Danes,[1] who were unable to defend their title after losing in the Quarterfinals to Hartford. Stony Brook won their second tournament in three years after a 2–1 victory in the final.[2] It was the first victory for first year head coach Tobias Bischof.[3][4]


Bracket[]

Quarterfinals
Sunday, Nov. 3
Semifinals
Thursday, Nov. 7
Final
Sunday, Nov. 10
1 Stony Brook 2
4 New Hampshire 3 4 New Hampshire 1
5 Binghamton 2 1 Stony Brook 2
3 Hartford 1
2 Albany 2
3 Hartford 1(2OT) 3 Hartford 3
6 UMass Lowell 0

Schedule[]

Quarterfinals[]

November 3, 2019 #3 Hartford 1–0 (a.e.t.) #6 UMass Lowell West Hartford, CT
1:00 p.m.
  • Skylar Vitiello gold-colored soccer ball 104'
Report
  • Yellow card 79' Courtney Coleman
  • Yellow card 104' Lily Fabian
Stadium: Al-Marzook Field at Alumni Stadium
Attendance: 202
Referee: Sam Mokalled
Assistant referees: Patrick Violette
Assistant referees: Michelle Beagan
Fourth official: Jason Dizek
November 3, 2019 #4 New Hampshire 3–2 #5 Binghamton Durham, NH
2:00 p.m.
  • Kaylan Williams 27'
  • Ally Reynolds 56'
  • Julie Cane 84'
Report
  • 36' Olivia McKnight
  • 84' Erin Theiller
Stadium: Wildcat Stadium
Attendance: 102
Referee: David Breckner
Assistant referees: Ernesto Rodriguez
Assistant referees: Mounir Idmalak

Semifinals[]

November 7, 2019 #1 Stony Brook 2–1 #4 New Hampshire Stony Brook, NY
6:00 p.m.
  • Erin O'Connor 59', 63'
  • Rachel Florenz Yellow card 88'
Report
  • 60' Kaylan Williams
  • Yellow card 64' Megan Rumbold
Stadium: LaValle Stadium
Attendance: 191
Referee: Mike DeFelice
Assistant referees: Michael Ziegler
Assistant referees: Luis Arroyo
Fourth official: Alex Casella
November 7, 2019 #2 Albany 2–3 #3 Hartford Albany, NY
7:00 p.m.
  • Leah Pais 30'
  • Meghan Cavanaugh 47'
Report
  • 10' Victor Jedrychowski
  • 15' Sierra Stone
  • 69' Bridgette Alexander
Stadium: Bob Ford Field
Attendance: 181
Referee: Adam Kilpatrick
Assistant referees: Thomas Snyder
Assistant referees: Hao Zhong
Fourth official: Aaron Corman

Final[]

November 10, 2019 #1 Stony Brook 2–1 #3 Hartford Stony Brook, NY
1:00 p.m.
  • Erin O'Connor 27'
  • Fanny Gotesson 71'
  • Anna Slang Yellow card 86'
Report
  • Yellow card 73' Skylar Vitiello
  • 80' Molly Socha
Stadium: LaValle Stadium
Attendance: 267
Referee: Patrick Violette
Assistant referees: Michael Ziegler
Assistant referees: Nate Penn
Fourth official: Sean Lyons

Statistics[]

Goalscorers[]

3 Goals
  • Erin O'Connor (Stony Brook)
2 Goals
  • Kaylan Williams (New Hampshire)
1 Goal
  • Bridgette Alexander (Hartford)
  • Julie Cane (New Hampshire)
  • Meghan Cavanaugh (Albany)
  • Fanny Gotesson (Stony Brook)
  • Victor Jedrychowski (Hartford)
  • Olivia McKnight (Binghamton)
  • Leah Pais (Albany)
  • Ally Renyolds (New Hampshire)
  • Molly Socha (Hartford)
  • Sierra Stone (Hartford)
  • Erin Theiller (Binghamton)
  • Skylar Vitiello (Hartford)

Source:[5]

Player Team
Olivia McKnight Binghamton
Dunja Mostarac UMass Lowell
Meghan Cavanaugh Albany
Leah Pais
Caitlyn Keenan New Hampshire
Kaylan Williams
Maia Perez Hartford
Sierra Stone
Skylar Vitiello
Erin O'Connor Stony Brook
Fanny Gotesson
Chelsie DePonte
Francesca Lee

MVP in bold

References[]

  1. ^ "2018 Women's Soccer Championship". americaeast.com. America East Conference. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  2. ^ "Stony Brook Captures Second #AEWSOC Title in Three Seasons". americaeast.com. America East Conference. November 10, 2019. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  3. ^ "2019 Women's Soccer Championship". americaeast.com. America East Conference. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  4. ^ "America East Women's Soccer Record Book" (PDF). americaeast.com. America East Conference. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  5. ^ "2019 #AEWSOC All-Championship Team". americaeast.com. America East Conference. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
Retrieved from ""