The 2008 Minnesota soccer team did not have a captain. Instead, it had eight seniors who knew how to lead because their entire college career had taught them the merits of hard work and leadership through a four-year upward battle. When the majority of this yearâÄôs graduating class committed to the team in 2004, Minnesota looked like a team in need of a helping hand. The team held an 8-10-0 record at the close of the 2004 season, winning just two conference matchups and ending the season 10th in the Big Ten. Opponents outscored the Gophers 26-17. Forward Lindsey Schwartz said though the team had not been experiencing a strong period, she fell in love with the University of Minnesota and the philosophy of her coaches, committing to the team in 2004. Fellow senior Kelsey Hood said, âÄúWhy not be a part of a program thatâÄôs growing and to make a program be in the top 16 in the country?âÄù Hood said. âÄúThat was kind of big for me.âÄù As this yearâÄôs seniors took to the field for the first time in 2005, the team saw some improvement. Minnesota finished the season with a .526 win percentage and control of fifth place in the Big Ten. It was the GophersâÄô best finish since Sue MontagneâÄôs final year of coaching in 1999. In 2004 and 2005 the Gophers were led by stalwart goalkeeper Molly Schneider. Senior goalkeeper Lindsey Dare, who joined the team in 2004 but sat out her freshman season because of injury, said she learned a lot from watching Schneider work. After 2005âÄôs improvement, Minnesota saw itself back at the bottom of the Big Ten in 2006, tied for 10th place after winning just one conference game. That season was a âÄúwakeup callâÄù for the team, Schwartz said. The players started strong, but then tapered off. âÄúWe didnâÄôt put in the effort a lot earlier on to carry us all through the season,âÄù she said. âÄúWe just kind of gave up during that season.âÄù A lack of strong leadership was also to blame, Hood said. The team had a large graduating class in 2005. âÄúWe were lost our sophomore year,âÄù she said, adding that going through a void of leadership inspired many of her teammates to step up as seniors this year. By the end of the 2007 season the team had regained some of its 2005 momentum and ended the year tied for fifth in the Big Ten. For Hood, her junior year was a major turning point because it made her realize the kind of potential the team could have. âÄúWe had the talent to do big things our senior year,âÄù she said. âÄúOur senior year was definitely when it showed.âÄù The flood gates broke open in 2008 as strong freshman additions and talent at all levels of the team helped post a record-breaking season. The most memorable feat this season was the GophersâÄô first third-round NCAA tournament appearance. Minnesota lost on a penalty kick midway through the overtime period, but the team was able to keep No. 1 powerhouse Notre Dame scoreless for more than 90 minutes. The undefeated Fighting Irish will compete for the national title this weekend in Cary, N.C. Despite the loss, Dare said, simply making it as far as they did was a huge accomplishment for the program. âÄú[The Fighting Irish] donâÄôt know what itâÄôs like,âÄù she said, âÄúTo bring a program out of the depths of the pit of darkness and bring it into the light and put the place on the map. If thereâÄôs anybody in the world that earned it, itâÄôs this group.âÄù DareâÄôs 17 shutouts this season surged to first in the history of the Big Ten. Her .45 GAA, though falling just shy of second overall in the conference, earned the top record for the team. She beat SchneiderâÄôs 2005 .84 GAA and her own average from 2006. Though Dare takes home these accolades, it seems fitting to some of the players that the teamâÄôs lasting accomplishments were defensive. Allowing only 12 goals in a season is a major statement and Dare has said in the past that her teammates work as hard on defense as she does. Dare said what the team has gone through will create a strong team for the future. âÄúWeâÄôre the ones that went through the really, really tough stuff so these girls donâÄôt have to go through it again,âÄù she said. âÄúFrom now on people are going to work really hard. WeâÄôre going to have a very competitive practice environment because of the way that these girls trained when they got hereâÄù
Senior knew they had something special
Published December 3, 2008
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