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The Cal State Dominguez Hills mens soccer
team experienced a return to glory of sorts in 2005, taking a 2-1
overtime win over then No. 5-ranked Seattle Pacific to capture the
NCAA Far West Region Title, propelling the Toros to a national
quarterfinal match-up against top-ranked and undefeated Fort Lewis
University, which bested the Toros 3-2 en route to claiming the
national title.
With that success, however, came key
departures, most notably CSUDHs potent 1-2 combination of
sophomore All-American Kei Kamara, who was drafted by the Columbus
Crew as the 9th-overall pick in Major League Soccers
SuperDraft, and senior Francisco Corona, who completed his final
year of eligibility in Cardinal & Gold as the CSUDH all-time
career leader in points. Combined, the talented duo accounted for
49% of the teams goals, 42% of the teams points
scored, 28% of the assists and 13 of the Toros 17
game-winning goals.
This season, however, also marks the return of
11 experienced letter-winners and four starters, which includes
his two-time All-CCAA goalkeeper, giving head coach Joe Flanagan
ample reason to smile. Fresh off his fourth CCAA Coach of the Year
award in 12 years at the helm of the mens program, Flanagan
realizes the shoes of his dynamic duo cant be replaced, but
knows this veteran squad has more than enough weapons to cause
waves in not only the CCAA, but on the national scale as well.
The returners we have this year
are very solid, and we have some good redshirts who we think can
step in and fill some holes in the forward spot that we lost in
Frankie and Kei, predicts Flanagan. And although were
looking for some new guys to step in and fill the holes
defensively, our midfield should be one of CSUDHs best ever.
Heres a closer look at wholl be
leading the Toros in 2006:
FORWARDS
With the departures of Kamara and Corona, junior Sammy Rivas
is expected to don the leadership role on the front line, and be
one of the first options Flanagan intends to utilize. Last season,
Rivas saw action in all 24 games, connecting for 6 goals and 16
total points, finishing 2005 tied for 12th in the CCAA in points,
and tied for 14th in both goals and assists. Rivas notched
multiple goals in two games, with his final goal of the season
coming in the NCAA quarterfinal loss to eventual National Champion
Fort Lewis.
Sammy had just an incredible
spring for us, and the team really started to understand what he
can do, Flanagan says of his lone returning player in the
front line. He had a very good fall for us too, but he was
definitely our go-to guy in the spring with his ability to make
plays. Flanagan continues, Sammys not
necessarily the guy whos gonna spray the ball around, but hes
more of a goal scorer and a guy who takes advantage of
opportunities and knows how to put the ball in the back of the
net.
Jose Serpas and Mario Guerrero,
who both utilized redshirt seasons in 2005, also are expected to
contribute to the Toros new-look attack. Serpas, the 2004
Orange Coast Conference Player of the Year, is a game-breaker who
changes pace and exhibits great speed while Guerrero, whose older
brother Victor etched his name amongst the Toros greats, looks to
continue the legacy left by the former All-American and CCAA
Player of the Year.
Jose has good speed and reads
the game very well, Flanagan begins, while Mario,
though hes a little unproven on the college level, is
someone we liked a lot coming out of high school. He wouldve
played for us last year, and played a lot, and we think he can do
some good things.
MIDFIELDERS
Stacked with senior leadership, talent and experience, the
midfield is led by Jesse Graham, a two-time All-CCAA
selection who has three years of history in Cardinal & Gold,
and Wilmer Lopez, whos looking to regain the form he
exhibited before injuries took their toll over the speedster over
the past two seasons.
Graham, needing two assists to take over 4th
place on CSUDHs all-time career assist list and 4 points and
6 goals to break into those top 10 career lists, tied for 4th in
the CCAA in assists, 12th in points and 15th in goals. A fiery
competitor who started all 23 games played, the San Diego native
notched two game-winning goals of his 6 on the season, and 4
assists which led to game-winning goals.
Jesse, whos grown
tremendously since hes been here, had a good spring in that
he played in a couple of different spots, and were hoping he
and a couple of other guys can pick up the leadership role,
Flanagan says of his only Toro with three years playing experience
under his belt. Jesses obviously one of our better
players, and if we can play him at right back, itll make our
defense very solid, and well be able to go forward a lot
better with him back there.
Lopez, who made a comeback after sitting out
2004 because of injury and saw his first action in the Toros
sixth game of the season, played in a total of 14 games in 2005,
much to the delight of CSUDHs coaching staff. A true scorer,
Lopez hopes to be 100% for the first time in two years and regain
the speed and quickness that made him a terror for opposing
defenses in 2003 when he tallied 4 goals and 12 points.
We havent seen Wilmer play
in the past couple of months, but from what I hear, hes back
and looks like the old Wilmer, and were very excited to see
him play again, anticipates Flanagan. Last year in the
two playoff games, he was pretty close. He came in as a sub and
didnt come out again. With his creativeness, Im hoping
this will be the breakout year weve been waiting for him to
have since hes been here.
Sophomore Carmelo Terranova was a
pleasant surprise for the Toros as a true freshman last season,
notching 4 goals and 5 assists in just 20 games played. The Saugus
native finished 8th in the CCAA in assists per game, 16th in
points per game and T20th in goals per contest, scoring his first
career collegiate goal in the 3-0 win over Western Washington
(Aug. 29), and a game-winner in a 3-0 shutout over Grand Canyon
(Sept. 26).
Carmelo has the uncanny knack to
score goals, says Flanagan. He has those certain
intangibles about him that make him a very good player.
Senior Shogo Okuma and junior Marco
Flores round out the returning midfielders. Okuma saw action
in all 24 games last season, tallying one assist in the 5-0 romp
over Cal Poly Pomona (Oct. 11), while Flores notched his lone
assist in the 3-2 win at San Francisco State (Oct. 14), despite
seeing action in just five games due to injury.
Shogo is a solid, consistent
player who sprays the ball around and has great vision, and is the
settling presence we like to have out there, Flanagan says,
remaining optimistic that Flores can strengthen his injury
to where he again can be that skilled player with the one-on-one
type ability we need.
DEFENDERS
Sophomore Alberto Garcia is the lone holdover from a
defense that blanked opponents in 9 games, and limited them to one
goal in 11 others, anchoring a position that will welcome a bevy
of newcomers in 2006.
Garcia saw action in all 24 games in 2006,
making 23 starts. A true freshman, the Santa Barbara native
notched his first collegiate point on a game-winning goal against
Seattle (Oct. 1), and his second against Seattle Pacific in the
Far West Region title game (Nov. 14).
Alberto is our only returning
back, Flanagan says as a matter-of-fact. He had a
great spring and was definitely a settling presence in the back,
and we know hes a leader and a consistent player we can
count on day in and day out.
GOALKEEPERS
Goalkeeper remains one of the Toros strengths, as senior and
two-year starter Kyle Polak returns for his final season
in Cardinal & Gold. A transfer from Division I Cal State
Fullerton, Polak has established himself as one of the all-time
CSUDH greats between the posts. Entering this season, the two-time
All-CCAA selection, who finished 2nd in the conference in goals
against average, tied for 3rd in shutouts and 5th in saves, holds
the 3rd and 5th places for wins, the 4th and 5th places for
shutouts and the 4th and 8th places for goals against average in a
single season.
Additionally, the Huntington Beach native is
2nd in goals against average in a career (currently trailing
former Toro great Javier Barragan by 0.05 percentage points) and
with 31 wins under his belt, needs just six wins this season to
surpass Chris Wilsons 36 victories and establish himself as
the winningest Toro of all time.
Kyle had a weird 2005 in that he
wasnt able to practice because of his bad ankle, but he
still had a great year, Flanagan says about his All-CCAA
goalie. Were hoping that the commitment he made over
the summer training with Chivas, and with the Columbus Crew
for about a week and the fact that this is his senior
season, hell be able to step up his game and taking it to
another level.
He has more capabilities as a
goal-keeper than anyone weve ever had, replied
Flanagan when asked if Polak could be the best goalie in the
history of CSUDH. I think hes got it all and is
extremely committed to the position of getting better. Weve
had some good goalkeepers in the past but Kyles definitely
turned it up another notch.
Derby Carrillo, who was granted a
medical redshirt last season after seeing action in just 5
contests, will provide solid relief off the bench in 2006. Polaks
understudy last season, the La Mirada native tallied 13 saves
against just 3 goals allowed.
NEWCOMERS
CSUDH welcomes nine newcomers to the mix, looking to solidify both
a defense decimated by departure and a forward position relying on
unproven talent to fill the void left by Kamara and Corona.
On the back line, Loyola Marymount transfer
LJ Reinhardt will be a welcome addition. Recruited by
Flanagan and his staff as a prep, the senior will provide
stability and a settling presence in the back. Last season,
Reinhardt saw action in 6 games with 2 starts for the Lions,
taking 2 of 3 shots on goal as a junior.
Along with the LMU transfer, Flanagan plans on
utilizing a handful of other multi-dimensional players who will
see plenty of time in the back.
We have the bodies for defense,
but were just not sure whos going to play where,
summarizes Flanagan. The good thing is that theyre all
interchangeable.
Julio Madrigal and Scott Mariano
will look to add to the Toros forwards. Madrigal, who scored 16
goals with 3 assists in just 16 games, led an LA Harbor College
squad that went 17-4-5 and 8-3-3 in conference play. Mariano,
meanwhile, captained his Gahr HS team that claimed the league
championship with a record of 15-2-2, leading the Gladiators in
scoring for two seasons.
Julio scored a lot of goals at
LA Harbor and were looking for him to do the same thing over
here, begins Flanagan, while Mariano, who can play out
wide or up top, had a great spring and did fantastic.
In the midfield, Cerritos College transfer Humberto
Lopez impressed the coaching staff with his all-around
ability, and will look to challenge what is an already stacked
midfield for playing time.
Hes a creative central mid
who can score, create and pass the ball, says Flanagan with
a smile. And at about 61, hes a good-sized
kid who will make our central midfield position the best ever.
THE SCHEDULE
The Toros continue to stack their schedule with national powers,
as evidenced by their first contests of the year at Western
Washington, Seattle Pacific and Seattle University, three games in
a span of five days. After their northwest trek, the Toros host
Grand Canyon for their home opener on Tuesday, September 5, before
CCAA Conference play begins with Cal Poly Pomona and Cal State San
Bernardino visiting Toro Stadium on September 8 and 10.
CSUDH then takes to the road for nearly three
weeks before returning home to host new CCAA member Humboldt State
on Friday, September 29. Things get interesting two days later as
CCAA Champion Sonoma State visits Carson on October 1, 329 days
after the Seawolves captured the CCAA crown with a 1-0 double
overtime win, and 350 days after Sonoma State handed the Toros a
6-0 drubbing during the regular season in Rohnert Park.
Sonoma States probably the
team to beat based on them being conference champions as well as
the returning cast they have, Flanagan says, looking forward
to the rematch. Sonomas always been a good game for us
and after losing in the conference finals, Im hoping our
returners remember that and come out, and play to win that night.
After UC San Diego pays Toro Stadium a visit on
October 4, the Toros play four of their final six games on the
road. CSUDH visits Cal State San Bernardino and Cal Poly Pomona on
October 6 and 8, before hosting Cal State Bakersfield and Cal
State L.A. one week later, with the match up against the Golden
Eagles marking the final regular season home game for CSUDHs
seniors.
The Toros conclude their regular season on
Sunday, October 22 at San Francisco State prior to the start of
the CCAA Tournament, slated to begin the weekend of October 27.
We always have a good game
against UC San Diego, and Bakersfields always been our
rival, although it may be different this year because of their
transition to D-I, Flanagan summarizes. But Im
hoping it still has the same flavor because its always been
a fun, good rivalry between us. Bottom line is that the conference
is always tough and you cant take any team lightly in the
conference, thats for sure.
FINAL THOUGHTS
Having soaked in the warmth that was the Far West Regional title,
Flanagan and his team are excited for the start of 2006 and the
chance to not only capture the conference title thats eluded
them the past three years, but also defend their regional crown.
I think we always want to be one
of those contenders, Flanagan begins. With our
midfield and goalkeeper, the defenders were bringing in and
the fact that I like the forwards even though theyre
unproven, I think we have the ability to win league.
Our team is very deep, he
continues. I dont know that we have a star like Kei or
Frankie
yet, but there are a couple in the making. We have
guys who have the talent and ability to make things happen in the
conference and to make us a competitive team thats gonna be
right there to the end. |