Harvard Crimson women's soccer explained

Harvard Crimson women's soccer
University:Harvard University
City:Boston
Stateabb:MA
State:Massachusetts
Stadium:Jordan Field
Nickname:Crimson
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Socks1:ffffff
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Ncaaeliteeight:1982, 1997, 2000
Ncaasweetsixteen:1982, 1984, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2014, 2022, 2023
Ncaatourneys:1982, 1984, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2021, 2022, 2024
Conference Tournament:2023
Conference Season:1978, 1979, 1981, 1995, 1996, 1997,1999, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2016

Starting in the 1977 season, the Women's Soccer team was elevated from a club level to a varsity sport at Harvard. Bob Scalise, Harvard's former athletic director, became the first head coach in program history and led Harvard to a 106-34-14 record during his ten seasons. This included three Ivy titles and one tournament quarterfinal appearance. His last season as coach was in 1986.

Following Bob Scalise's retirement, Tim Wheaton took over the Crimson for 18 seasons, recording a 156-95-45 record. During those 18 seasons, he led Harvard to four Ivy League titles, seven NCAA appearances, and reached the quarterfinals twice.

Harvard then went through two coaches who each served for one year. In 2005, Stephanie Erickson led the Crimson to an 8-5-3 record, and the following year, Erika Walsh went 3-13-1.

In 2007, Ray Leone took over the Crimson and went 90-49-18 before accepting a job at Maryland in 2016.

The current head coach is Chris Hamblin, who started in 2016 and has gone 81-34-17. He has led Harvard to one Ivy League Championship and four NCAA appearances, including reaching the Round of 16 twice. He also won the first Ivy League Conference Tournament in 2023 by defeating Columbia 3-0.

Roster

[1]

Rivalries

See main article: Harvard–Yale soccer rivalry. Harvard athletics have a longstanding rivalry with Yale across all sports since 1875,and it also translates to the women's soccer programs.

The first game of the series was played on November 11, 1977 where Harvard beat Yale 2-0. Harvard went on to win 13 in a row until 1990. Harvard is currently 36-9-2 in the 46 meetings hosting the longest win streak at 13 and currently on a 5 game win streak dating back to 2018.

Team honors

Conference championships

Harvard has won 13 Ivy League championships.The Ivy League began sponsoring women's varsity soccer in 1977. Prior to 1977, Harvard competed as a club team.[2]

SeasonConferenceCoachOverall RecordConference Record
1978 Ivy Bob Scalise 13–1–0 0-0-0
1979 Ivy Bob Scalise 15-1-1 0-0-0
1981 Ivy Bob Scalise 17-2-0 0-0-0
1995 Ivy Tim Wheaton 14-2-1 6-0-1
1996 Ivy Tim Wheaton 15–2–0 7–0–0
1997 Ivy Tim Wheaton13–4–2 6–1–0
1999 Ivy Tim Wheaton14–2–1 7–0–0
2008Ivy Ray Leone10–3–5 5–1–1
2009Ivy Ray Leone9–7–1 6-1-0
2011Ivy Ray Leone12–5–1 6-0-1
2013Ivy Ray Leone12–4–2 7-0-0
2014Ivy Ray Leone11–5–2 5-1-1
2016Ivy Chris Hamblin10–4–3 5-0-2

Individual honors

First Team All-Americans

Harvard Women's Soccer have had 6 First Team All-Americans and 28 All-Americans (1st, 2nd, 3rd and honorable mention)

PlayerPositionYear
Lauren Gregg 1980
Emily Stauffer M 1995, 1996
Naomi Miller FW 1996
Margaret Purce FW 2016
Hannah Bebar MF 2022
Josefine Hasbo MF 2023

Second Team All-Americans

Harvard has fielded six second-team All-Americans.

PlayerPositionYear
Alicia Carillo FW 1982
Jennifer Greeley MF 1982
Kelly Landry FW 1983, 1984
Tracee Whitley GK 1987
Emily Stauffer MF 1998
Jade Rose MF 2022

Third Team All-Americans

Harvard has fielded nine third-team All-Americans.

PlayerPositionYear
Tracee Whitley GK 1984, 1985
Ann Browning GK 1996
Karen Gudeman FW 1996
Devon BinghamMF1996
Katie WestfallMF2001
Liza BarberDF2004
Margaret PurceFW2013
Hannah BebarFW2022
Jade RoseDF2023

Notable alumni

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://gocrimson.com/sports/womens-soccer/roster Women's soccer roster
  2. Web site: Women's Soccer Record Books Titles .