Nebraska Cornhuskers women's soccer explained

Nebraska Cornhuskers women's soccer
University:University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Athletic Director:Troy Dannen
Conference:Big Ten Conference
Conference Short:Big Ten
City:Lincoln
Stateabb:NE
State:Nebraska
Coach:John Walker
Tenure:31st
Stadium:Barbara Hibner Soccer Stadium
Capacity:2,500
Nickname:Cornhuskers
Ncaaeliteeight:1996, 1999, 2023
Ncaasweetsixteen:1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2023
Ncaaroundof32:1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2013, 2016, 2023
Ncaatourneys:1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2013, 2016, 2023
Conference Tournament:1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2013
Conference Season:1996, 1999, 2000, 2013, 2023

The Nebraska Cornhuskers women's soccer team represents the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in the Big Ten Conference of NCAA Division I.[1] The program has been coached by John Walker since being established in 1994. Walker was the NSCAA National Coach of the Year in 1996 and has been named conference coach of the year four times.

In thirty years of competition, the program has won 365 matches and competed in thirteen NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Championships.

History

In 1994, Nebraska became the first Big Eight school to add women's soccer as a varsity sport. John Walker, now in his thirtieth season as head coach, led the program to its first NCAA Championship appearance in 1996. The Cornhuskers began the 1996 season 21–0–0, winning the Big 12 for the first time and advancing to the NCAA Division I quarterfinals.[2] NU has since won five more conference tournaments, in 1998–2000, 2002, and 2013. In fifteen years of Big 12 competition, the Cornhuskers compiled a league-best record of 106–47–15. Nebraska has produced forty-seven first-team and seventy total all-conference selections, as well as thirty-three all-conference tournament awards.[3] [4]

The Cornhuskers play home games at Barbara Hibner Soccer Stadium, named after former Women's Athletic Director Barbara Hibner, who was integral to the introduction of soccer as a varsity sport at NU. Hibner Stadium was built in 2015 and has a maximum capacity of 2,500.[5] [6] Walker said of the new stadium: "This is phenomenal. Everything is first class. There's nothing cookie-cutter about it."[7] Nebraska has ranked first or second in the Big Ten in attendance in each season at the venue.[8] For two decades before moving to Hibner Stadium, NU played at the Ed Weir Track and Field Stadium, located just northeast of Memorial Stadium. The Weir complex, built in 1975, was one of the smallest soccer venues in the Big Ten.[9] [10]

Coaches

Coaching history

1John Walker 1994– 365–193–61 157–99–34 NCAA Division I Quarterfinal
Conference champion
Conference tournament champion

Coaching staff

John Walker Head coach 1994 Queen's University
Savanah Anderson-Baer Assistant coach 2023 Nebraska
Assistant coach 2015
Marty Everding Assistant coach 2011 Queen's University

All-Americans

Fourteen Cornhuskers have earned twenty total All-America selections.

First Team Second Team
  • Lindsay Eddleman – 1996
  • Sharolta Nonen– 1998
  • Isabelle Morneau – 1998, 1999
  • Christine Latham – 2000
  • Megan Marlborough – 2010
  • Ari Romero – 2013
Third Team
  • Rebecca Hornbacher – 1996
  • Sharolta Nonen – 1997
  • Kim Engesser – 1998
  • Christine Latham – 2001, 2002
  • Brittany Timko – 2004, 2005
  • Jaycie Johnson – 2016

Season-by-season results

Regular season championTournament championRegular season and tournament champion
1994John Walker14–4–0
199510–8–0
1996John Walker 23–1–0 9–0–0 1st 6
199718–4–0 8–2–0 2nd 7
199817–4–1 9–1–0 2nd 10
199922–1–2 10–0–0 1st 5
200022–2–0 9–1–0 1st 9
200117–5–1 8–1–1 2nd 12
200216–6–3 6–3–1 3rd 13
200313–8–1 6–4–0 4th 23
200414–9–0 6–4–0 5th 22
200514–8–1 6–3–1 2nd 21
200610–7–3 4–5–1 5th
20075–10–4 1–8–1 T–10th
200810–9–1 6–4–0 6th
200911–5–4 5–3–2 4th
201013–7–1 5–4–1 3rd
2011John Walker 7–10–1 4–7 10th
20127–12–1 4–7–0 T–7th
201319–4–1 10–1–0 1st 13
20148–9–2 4–7–2 T–9th
20158–7–2 4–5–2 T–9th
201611–6–5 5–3–3 6th
20179–5–5 3–3–5 T–8th
20189–7–5 5–3–3 5th
20194–10–4 3–6–2 T–8th
20202–5–3 11th
20217–9–2 3–5–2 11th
20228–7–5 5–3–2 T–4th
202317–4–3 7–1–2 T–1st 7

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nebraska Women's Soccer NCAA.com. NCAA.com. 2016-11-21.
  2. Web site: John Walker. Huskers Soccer.
  3. Web site: John Walker. Huskers- Nebraska.
  4. Web site: Nebraska NCAA Tournament Records. Nebraska Soccer.
  5. News: Barbara Hibner Soccer Stadium. Huskers.com. 2016-11-21.
  6. News: Husker soccer team will host NCAA Tournament opener. Star. SHEA CARLSON Lincoln Journal. JournalStar.com. 2016-11-21.
  7. Web site: State-of-the-art Hibner Stadium wows Husker soccer players on first visit.
  8. News: Husker Fans Set Attendance Bar High Across Board. Huskers.com. 2016-11-22.
  9. News: Regents Approve Soccer and Tennis Complex. Huskers.com. 2016-12-01.
  10. News: Track and Field - Ed Weir Stadium. Huskers.com. 2016-12-01.