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Interesting, thank you.Not turbobol but, it looks like Ms. Sayoc actually enrolled at UT early in January 2021, but then did not appear in any of the Lady Vols' matches during the spring. She transferred to Western Kentucky that summer.
See: WKU Soccer adds pair of transfers to 2021 roster
Not turbobol but, it looks like Ms. Sayoc actually enrolled at UT early in January 2021, but then did not appear in any of the Lady Vols' matches during the spring. She transferred to Western Kentucky that summer.
See: WKU Soccer adds pair of transfers to 2021 roster
I’m super excited about this team, it’s gonna be a special season. Ten of the starting 11 from last years team that dominated Arkansas in the SEC championship match are returning and you have to think they will only be better.Speaking of transfers, Mackenzie George has made a huge impact on this program since coming here after her freshman year at Cal Poly, where she was the Big West Freshman of the Year. George is a tough, physical player with good (but not blazing) speed. Her biggest asset is her strength on the ball: When she is engaged by a defender, she can often beat and get past her mark, usually with just muscle. She can turn with the ball and get forward with it extremely well. Pensky liked to say of her, "She's just a dog"--that being a compliment.
She is a near-genius at getting us corner kicks: Typically she will get around her mark and dribble toward the end line, attempt a cross with the ball--and the defender will block it out behind the end line, and the Vols get a corner. I don't know how many times she's done that in the last three years, but it's a big number. Unfortunately, we've not been good at converting corner kicks--and I dearly hope that is a point of emphasis in this preseason camp. We had lots of games last year in which we had 7-12 corner kicks and didn't score off any of them. It's hard to score off corners--but if you can just convert one corner chance out of, say, 5 or 8, into a goal, you are probably not sweating games late so much.
George was first-team All SEC last year and I think she's led the Vols in assists the last three years (must confirm). She's been so focused on producing centering passes, crosses for teammates that her finishing skills--her ability to scorer herself when given a chance--have suffered. That's been her one weakness as a forward. However, she has improved in that respect and I think we'll see her shoot (rather than just service) more this year. Thomas and Huff will get a lot of defensive attention, and so you want your other attacking players--George, Fusco, Burdette, others)--to be able to put the ball in the net if they are open and have a good chance. This should make us a hard team to defend this year.
One worry about George is that given her physical play in every game--she is perfectly happy to try and push through two defenders at times--you don't want her getting injured or worn out by the end of the season. That might mean asking her to give the ball up a bit more often rather than always wanting to engage in physical combat with opponents!
Great write up on Claudia Dipasupil.Dipasupil was a starting left-side midfielder for us in our four-player midfield for most if not all of the year, and shared playing time with Hannah Zaluski, who, like Dipasupil, is left-footed. Dipasupil's is a talented free-kick specialist--that is her chief strength, and she used it to score, as I recall, six goals last year. I think at least 2 maybe 3 came on penalty kicks--she took them for us last year and hit them well. She can hit and target the ball nicely, and she and Zaluski both have a good understanding of the game. (Zaluski scored the game winner for us against Missouri off of, as I recall, an Overtime centering pass from George). That said, we weren't as strong in run of play on the left side of midfield last year as we were on the right, which was patrolled by T. Huff. Dipasupil is decently athletic but not very big and not very pacey, and, candidly, we didn't control the left side of the midfield as we did the right, typically. It's nice to have left-footed players on the left-side of the field--but it need not be a prerequisite. There are a lot of right-footed, left-side players in soccer. There are players on every team, on every level, in every sport that perform quite solidly against average opponents but are, let's say, less solid, when you are playing a really strong opponent; when they have to compete with players who are stronger, faster, more athletic. That is something for the coaches to think about--but meanwhile we've got a savvy veteran with a good foot at this position.
Wow, hearing him say it’s his deepest team is crazy with all those talented teams. Gonna be a great test for Tennessee.We'd better be ready to go from the get-go this year, what with 5 tough games to start the season.
North Carolina coach Anson Dorrance says in this interview, the first of two parts, that this will be the deepest team he's ever had. That's a scary thought given that UNC is /always/ talented and deep. The Heels like to press opponents, which is something we need to be prepared to deal with, and Dorrance typically brings in a bunch of substitutes--often six--at the 15 or 20 minute mark of the first half--essentially his second unit, and keep pressing. One thing that should help us in the UNC and all other games is that we like to press ourselves--and were quite good at bottling teams up last year. Indeed, in the SEC Tourney semifinal, a pretty good Ole Miss team could hardly get the ball out of its defensive half in the first half. So a good way to deal with a pressing team is to press them, in turn, and we'll see which side is the more effective. Certainly, playing with confidence will be important; you can't play scared or tentative against big opponents or you'll find yourself in trouble early. Arkansas--which had a good, veteran team last year--played both Duke and UNC last season and played quite well, losing each game by a goal.
2022 Women's Soccer Preview With Anson Dorrance: Part I - University of North Carolina Athletics
Wow, hearing him say it’s his deepest team is crazy with all those talented teams. Gonna be a great test for Tennessee.
I don’t understand the substitution rule in college, it’s completely different than in the pros.