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Northeastern Huskies men's soccer

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Northeastern Huskies men's soccer
Founded1984; 40 years ago
UniversityNortheastern University
Head coachJeremy Bonomo (2nd season)
ConferenceCAA
LocationBoston, Massachusetts
StadiumParsons Field
(Capacity: 7,000)
NicknameHuskies
ColorsRed and black[1]
   
Home
Away
NCAA Tournament appearances
2002, 2012
Conference Tournament championships
2012
Conference Regular Season championships
2000, 2002

The Northeastern Huskies men's soccer is an intercollegiate varsity sports team of Northeastern University in NCAA Division I college soccer, located in Boston, Massachusetts. The team competes in the Colonial Athletic Association and plays its home matches at Parsons Field, a 7,000-seat multi-purpose stadium in Brookline, Massachusetts. The facilities include two multipurpose weight and cardio rooms in the Cabot Center and Matthews Arena.

The Huskies are currently led by head coach Jeremy Bonomo, who took the position in February 2024 after serving as a head coach at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay.[2] The team has an all-time record 280–380–83 (.433) through the 2024 season.[3] The Huskies have made two appearances in the NCAA tournament with a combined record of 2–2, in 2002 and 2012.[4]

Head coaches

[edit]
Tenure Coach Years Record Pct.
1984–1986 Winston Smith 3 14–54–2 .214
1987–1990 Keith Cammidge 4 17–36–1 .324
1991–1995 Turi Lonero 5 39–51–1 .434
1996–2004 Ed Matz 9 83–74–18 .526
2005–2015 Brian Ainscough 11 82–92–35 .476
2016–2021 Chris Gbandi 6 32–52–10 .394
2022–2023 Rich Weinrebe 2 10–16–9 .414
2024–present Jeremy Bonomo 1 4-5-7 .469

Current technical staff

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Position Staff
Athletic director Jim Madigan
Head coach Jeremy Bonomo
Assistant coach Ricardo Pinto
Strength and conditioning coach Peter Franco
Athletic trainer Olivia George
Equipment manager Nick Lachney

Last updated: September 28, 2024

Roster

[edit]
As of November 11, 2024[5]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
0 GK Germany GER Tobias Jahn
4 FW United States USA Tomas Sciarra
6 DF United States USA Jaden Prado
7 MF United States USA Alec Kenison
8 MF Canada CAN Ethan Kang
12 MF United States USA Kade Tepe
13 MF United States USA Richard Conces
14 MF Norway NOR Thomas Vold
17 DF Germany GER Mathias Hille
18 DF United States USA Jackson Flier
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 MF United States USA Morris Matthews
20 DF United States USA Ethan Leary
21 MF New Zealand NZL Fraser Brown
23 MF Canada CAN Alexander Henderson
25 DF United States USA Gus Mendieta
29 DF Germany GER Christopher Schurz
30 DF United States USA Matty Gardner
31 GK United States USA Brady Elmblad
32 MF United States USA Neil Devnani
36 DF United States USA Andrew Wilbert

Record by year

[edit]

References:[6]

Conference Regular Season Champions Conference Tournament Champions Conference Regular Season & Tournament Champions
Season Conference Head Coach Season Results Postseason result
Overall Conference Conf.
standings
1984 Independent Winston Smith 4–11–0
1985 3–14–2
1986 2–17–0
1987 5–12–0
1988 America East Keith Cammid 4–14–0 0–5–0 6th No Conference Tournament
1989 3–15–0 0–5–0 6th
1990 10–7–1 1–4–0 5th
1991 Turi Lonero 4–16–0 0–7–0 8th
1992 7–11–0 1–6–0 7th
1993 10–8–0 3–4–0 6th
1994 7–10–1 2–5–0 6th
1995 11–6–0 5–4–0 7th
1996 Ed Matz 12–5–2 6–1–2 2nd
1997 5–11–2 3–4–2 5th
1998 7–11–0 1–8–0 10th
1999 11–6–2 5–2–2 3rd
2000† 10–8–0 7–2–0 1st
2001 13–8–0 7–4–0 4th
2002♦ 12–8–4 6–2–0 1st NCAA Tournament Berth(2nd Round)/American East Tournament(Vice Champion)
2003 10–7–4 4–4–1 5th
2004 3–10–4 2–4–3 8th
2005 Colonia Athletic Association Brian Ainscough 3–9–6 2–4–5
2006 8–10–2 6–4–1 5th CAA Tournament(1st Round)
2007 8–10–1 6–4–1 6th CAA Touranment(1st Round)
2008 7–5–9 5–2–4 5th CAA Tournament(Vice-Champion)
2009 10–8–1 8–2–1 3rd CAA Tournament(Vice-Champion)
2010 5–9–3 3–5–3 10th
2011 10–6–3 6–4–1 5th CAA Tournament(1st Round)
2012‡ 14–3–4 6–4–1 2nd NCAA Tournament Berth(2nd Round)/CAA Tournament(Champion)
2013 6–9–3 3–3–3 5th CAA Tournament(1st Round)
2014 8–11–1 8–11–1 5th CAA Tournament(Semifinalist)
2015 3–12–2 2–6–0 8th
2016 Chris Gbandi 6–11–0 3–5–0 8th
2017 3–12–3 1–6–1 8th
2018 6–9–1 3–4–1 6th CAA Tournament(1st Round)
2019 6–9–3 3–3–2 5th CAA Tournament(1st Round)
2020 0-5-1 0-3-1 9th
2021 11–6–2 5–1–2 2nd CAA Touranment(1st Round)
2022 Rich Weinrebe 6–9–3 4–4–1 4th CAA Touranment(1st Round)
2023 4–7–6 1–4–3 10th
2024 Jeremy Bonomo 4-5-7 2–4–2 9th
2025

Honors

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Awards

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Northeastern played soccer as a member of the America East Conference from 1988 to 2004. Northeastern plays soccer as a member of the Coastal Athletic Association from 2005 to present.[7]

  • All-Rookie Team
Andres Torrealba, M, 2021
Andrew Konopelsky, M, 2005
Antha Kirkopoulos, M, 2001
Don Anding, F, 2009
Daniel Ivec, M, 2003
David Downing, F, 2002
Donovan Fayd'Herbe de Maudave, F, 2012
Ethan Kang, M, 2024
Lars Okland, M, 2006
Laurence Braude, M, 2010
Matt Sanford, D, 2007
Mike Kennedy, M, 2008
Oumar Thiam, M, 2000
Robbie Schallmo, M, 2013
Ryan Massoud, F, 2018
Sami Baiche, M, 2022
Sebastian Restrepo, F, 2021
Sergio Saccoccio, GK, 2002
Terence Carter, F, 2012
Thomas Vold, M, 2023
Timothy Ennin, F, 2019
Tom Heimreid, M, 2002
  • All-CAA Team selections
Albert Numlér, M, Second Team, 1997
Alexander Volk, M, Third Team, 2007
Anders Høyem, M, First Team, 2000, 2001
Anders Høyem, M, Second Team, 1999
Andrew Boyea, GK, First Team, 1996
Andrew Konopelsky, M, First Team, 2002
Benjamin Klingen, F, Second Team, 2019, 2020, 2021
Bjorn Hansen, M, First Team, 1995, 1996
Brad Fountain, M, Third Team, 2014
Brendan Faherty, M, Second Team, 1999
Colby Hegarty , GK, Third Team, 2021
Dante Marini, M, First Team, 2011, 2013
Dante Marini, M, Second Team, 2012
Don Anding, F, First Team, 2009, 2012
Federico Tellez, M, First Team, 2021, 2023
Federico Tellez, M, Second Team, 2022
Frantzdy Pierrot, F, Second Team, 2014
Frantzdy Pierrot, F, First Team, 2015
Glen Jusczyk, M, Second Team, 1996
Greg Kilkenny, F, First Team, 2006, 2007
Harry Swartz, F, Second Team, 2017, 2018
Heiko Ross, D, Second Team, 1995
Jonathan Eckford, M, Second Team, 2013
Jonathan Eckford, M, Third Team, 2012
Lars Okland, M, First Team, 2007, 2008
Lars Okland, M, Second Team, 2009
Martin Nygaard, D, Second Team, 2018
Matt Sanford, D, Second Team, 2010
Mike Kennedy, F, Second Team, 2010
Mike Kennedy, F, Third Team, 2008, 2009, 2011
Moustapha Samb, D, Third Team, 2018
Nils Aass, M, Second Team, 1995
Oliver Blum, GK, First Team, 2012
Oumar Thiam, M, Second Team, 2002, 2003
Petter Starnas, F, First Team, 1999
Petter Starnas, F, Second Team, 2000, 2001
Ryan Burnham, D, Third Team, 2011
Ryan Massoud, M, Third Team, 2019, 2020
Santiago Bedoya, D, First Team, 2009
Santiago Bedoya, D, Second Team, 2010
Sergio Saccoccio, GK, Second Team, 2005
Simon Cox, D, First Team, 2012, 2013
Simon Cox, D, Second Team, 2014
Thomas Vold, M, Third Team, 2023
Timothy Ennin, F, Third Team, 2019, 2020, 2021
Tom Heimreid, M, Second Team, 2004
Trond Olsen, F, Second Team, 2001
  • Player of the Year
Antha Kirkopoulos, M, 2002
Bjorn Hansen, M, 1995
Don Anding, F, 2012
  • MAC-Hermann Trophy Semifinalist
Don Anding, F, 2012
  • Coach of the Year
Brian Ainscough, 2012
Ed Matz, 2000, 2002
Keith Cammidge, 1990

Notable alumni

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This list of former players includes those who received international caps, made significant contributions to the team in terms of appearances or goals, or who made significant contributions to the sport after they left. It is clearly not yet complete and all inclusive, and additions and refinements will continue to be made over time.

Current professionals

[edit]
  • Updated November 11, 2024

References

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  1. ^ "Northeastern Athletics Logo Sheet". August 13, 2018. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  2. ^ "Northeastern Welcomes Jeremy Bonomo as Men's Soccer Head Coach". CAA. Retrieved 2 February 2024.
  3. ^ "Year-by-Year Records". Northeastern University. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  4. ^ "All Time Records vs. Opponents". Northeastern University. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  5. ^ "2023 Men's Soccer Roster". nuhuskies.com. Northeastern University Athletics. Retrieved November 18, 2024.
  6. ^ "Men's Soccer - All-Time Results".
  7. ^ "Men's Soccer - Award Winners". Northeastern University. Retrieved 12 November 2024.
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