Word: ericksons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
After spending the ’99 season on the Crimson staff, Erickson headed out west to assistant coach for Stanford. The Cardinals went 60-21-5 during her tenure there. She also served as interim co-head coach in 2002, when Stanford captured a national No. 1 ranking, and Erickson was honored by Soccer America as the National Coach of the Year along with co-head coach Paul Sapsford...
Stephanie Erickson beat out over 100 other applicants when she was named the new Harvard women’s soccer head coach on Friday, replacing longtime coach Tim Wheaton—who became an assistant athletic director earlier this year. She was tapped for the job after excelling in interviews with a search committee, the administration, and the rising team captains...
...Erickson returns to lead a Crimson program that she was an assistant coach for in 1999, when Harvard went 14-2-1 and earned its first-ever seeding in the NCAA Tournament...
...addition to her coaching credentials, Erickson boasts some impressive statistics from her playing days. She is the all-time leading scorer in the history of the Wildcats, won the Big Ten scoring title in 1996 while leading Northwestern to an NCAA tournament berth, and also holds the NCAA record for fastest consecutive goals scored in a game—five seconds apart...
...Erickson inherits a Crimson team that appeared in the NCAA tournament this season for the first time since 2001. While the team will lose co-captain back Liza Barber, co-captain midfielder Falyne Chave, forward Emily Colvin, and midfielder Alisha Moran to graduation, Harvard will return 14 letterwinners for the 2005 season, including junior goalkeeper Katie Shields and sophomore back Laura Odorczyk, who were voted co-captains of next year’s squad...