Box Score
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Erin
Casey |
Ellen
Walker |
Box score
Photo gallery (courtesy of Dan
Ceccacci)
The University of Scranton women's soccer team staged another
thrilling comeback to force overtime, but when the two extra
periods weren't enough to decide a winner in Saturday's Landmark
Conference championship match, the Royals' magic ran out.
Drew University captured its first Landmark Conference
championship by winning a shootout, 4-3, after the two teams
battled to a 1-1 draw through double overtime. The Rangers (15-3-1)
earn the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division III
Tournament.
The match officially ends in a draw, which means Scranton
(14-2-3) extended its unbeaten streak to 17 straight matches after
dropping their first two matches of the season. The Royals will now
wait to see if they will be awarded an at-large bid to the NCAA
Tournament when the field is announced on Monday, Nov. 11.
Sophomore midfielder Mel Santos (Iselin, N.J./John F. Kennedy
Memorial) connected on her shootout attempt to end the fifth round
and give the Rangers the title-winning moment it had been hoping
for all afternoon. For 88 minutes, it looked like they'd get it in
regulation.
Drew struck quickly when sophomore forward Emma Campbell
(Cresskill, N.J./Cresskill) scored her third goal of the playoffs
and 15th of the season in the seventh minute on a feed from
Santos.
From there, Scranton kept the pressure on for the rest of the
half, building a 9-2 advantage in shots. But Rangers' senior
goalkeeper Agata Dera (Wallington, N.J./Wallington) made four saves
in the opening minute en route to earning most valuable player
honors.
In the second half, Scranton kept the pressure on, but needed
nearly the entire period to tie the match. The Royals finally found
the goal it so desperately needed when sophomore defender
Erin
Casey (Hatfield, Pa./Gwynedd Mercy Academy) connected
on a header with 1:31 remaining in regulation on a corner kick by
junior midfielder Ellen Walker
(Bethlehem, Pa./Liberty).
Both overtimes were filled with intensity, including most of the
second overtime being played deep in Rangers territory. But the
Royals managed just two shots in the period, neither on goal,
leading to the shootout.
Both teams missed in the opening round of the five-round
shootout, then each team converted in the next three rounds. When
Scranton missed to open the fifth round, it set up Santos to secure
the title for Drew.
By winning the title, the Rangers avenged a 4-2 loss to Scranton
in the regular season, a win that propelled the Royals to the top
seed in the playoffs for the fourth straight season. They had won
the previous three titles and four in the conference's previous six
years of existence.
Casey's goal was her third of the season while Walker picked up
her fourth assist for the Royals, who will be hoping for good news
from the NCAA on Monday. An at-large bid would mark the 18th NCAA
Tournament appearance for women's
soccer.
--ROYALS--