PHILADELPHIA – Coming off one of the best regular-season wins in program history last Friday night, the University of Pennsylvania men's soccer team concludes its four-game road swing to start the 2023 season on Tuesday night when the Quakers are at Rider. Kickoff is scheduled for 7 p.m.
Penn was picked first in the Ivy League's preseason poll, which was announced by the league office on August 31. The Quakers received 119 voting points from 16 media members—two from each of the eight Ivy institutions—and garnered nine first-place votes. Cornell was picked second, with 115 points and six first-place votes, while Harvard got the final first-place vote and 87 points total to place third. Yale (73 points), Princeton (67), Dartmouth (49), Brown (42), and Columbia (24) rounded out the poll.
MATCH DAY 4 – PENN at RIDER
Tuesday, Sept. 12 | 7 p.m. | Lawrenceville, N.J.
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Penn vs. Rider
These teams met a year ago, the Quakers opening what would be an historic season with a 2-1 win over the Broncs on Rhodes Field in Philly. All three goals came in the first half,
Leo Burney and
Mateo Zazueta scoring for Penn before Rider's Tom Skrocki got one back before the break. It also was a contentious match, the teams combining for 29 fouls and three yellow cards.
Quaker Notemeal
*Penn is coming off a 3-0 win at No. 14 Penn State last Friday night, the Quakers' first win ever in State College.
*Senior
Michael Hewes was the standout, as he netted a second-half hat trick to push Penn to victory. He was named the
Ivy League's Offensive Player of the Week on Monday and earned a spot on the
CollegeSoccerNews.com National Team of the Week.
*At the other end, goalkeeper
Nick Christoffersen had six saves in keeping his first clean sheet of the season. He was named the
Ivy League's Defensive Player of the Week on Monday.
*Penn went 13-3-2 overall last season and won the Ivy League title with a 6-1-0 mark. The Quakers then advanced to the NCAA Championship for the first time since 2013 (11th time overall), defeating Big Ten Tournament champion Rutgers in the first round, 3-0, before falling in overtime to the eventual national champion Syracuse, 2-1. Of note, Penn was the last team to hold a lead against the Orange in the 2022 season.
*Penn's 13 wins overall were tied for the second-most in program history along with the 1971, 1973 and 2010 teams. Only the 1972 team (14-1-1) has more.
*Penn's six wins in Ivy League play were the most in a season since 1972, when the Quakers won the title with a 6-0-1 mark. The 1971 squad remains the only Penn team to go a perfect 7-0-0 in Ivy play.
*Penn returns plenty of firepower from a year ago, starting with the reigning Ivy League Offensive and Defensive Players of the Year in juniors
Stas Korzeniowski and
Leo Burney. (If you're doing the math, you are correct…both of them won the honors as
sophomores.) Last year marked the first time that teammates swept the offensive and defensive honors since the award was split in 2013. The last sophomore to win Ivy Player of the Year before them last year? Rikki Dadason at Columbia in 1993.
*The pair of juniors—both of whom received All-America recognition last year by the United Soccer Coaches and
College Soccer News—were recently named to the Hermann Award Watch List as announced by the Missouri Athletic Club (MAC). Of the 37 players on the list, they were the only two Ivy Leaguers.
*This summer, both players contributed greatly to the success of Ballard FC in USL League 2 play, leading the club to the title in a thrilling victory over Lionsbridge FC, 2-1, on August 5. Korzeniowski scored the opening goal in the match, while Burney played a major role in setting up inside the box for the match winner.
*Korzeniowski—who was Penn's goal scorer in the season opener at Fordham—wreaked havoc on opposing defenses throughout last season, scoring a conference-leading 10 goals and adding six assists for 26 points, the most by a Quaker in more than 25 years. He capped his season with goals in five of the team's final seven matches, including four of the last five Ivy contests.
*Penn also returns junior defender
Ben Do, who was honorable mention All-Ivy and won the Bill Wilkinson Rookie of the Year Award from the Philadelphia Soccer Six last year as a sophomore. He started all 18 matches last season.
*Hewes was Penn's third-leading scorer last season, netting six goals, while junior
Brandon Curran was the other multi-goal scorer in 2022.
*At the other end, Penn is bolstered by the return of Christoffersen for another season in goal. (He has gone the distance in all three matches to date.) The Canadian played all but four minutes between the pipes in 2022 and earned second-team All-Ivy, then was selected with the 25th pick of the 2022 MLS Super Draft third round (83rd overall) by CF Montréal.
*Penn's head coach is
Brian Gill, who moved into the director's chair in February 2018 after spending a year as an assistant coach under Rudy Fuller. He was a unanimous selection as Ivy League Coach of the Year last season and his staff was picked as the Northeast Region Staff of the Year by the United Soccer Coaches.
*Christoffersen and Hewes are two of this year's captains, along with senior
Jacob Muchnick and junior
Aaron Messer. Christoffersen also was a captain last season.
For the latest on Penn men's soccer, follow @PennMSoccer on X (formerly Twitter) and Instagram, and on the web at PennAthletics.com
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