Click Here For PDF Release
2019 Northeast Conference
Women's Soccer
Preseason Coaches Poll
1. Central Connecticut (9)
2. Saint Francis U (1)
3. Fairleigh Dickinson (1)
4. Bryant
5. Mount St. Mary’s
6. Sacred Heart
7. Robert Morris
8. LIU
9. Wagner
10. St. Francis Brooklyn
11. Merrimack
First place votes in parentheses |
Somerset, NJ -- After sweeping its way through the Northeast Conference (NEC) regular season and postseason in 2018 en route to the program’s ninth tournament title, Central Connecticut was selected by the league’s head coaches as the overwhelming favorite to repeat in 2019.
In landing atop the NEC preseason poll for the first time since 2015, CCSU earned nine first place votes. Saint Francis U and Fairleigh Dickinson were picked second and third, respectively, each claiming a lone first place nod.
Central Connecticut rolled through the NEC regular season with a perfect 8-0 mark and finished the 2018 campaign with a 16-2-2 record, compiling the second most wins in program history. The Blue Devils went into the NCAA Tournament unbeaten in 17 straight games before dropping a 3-1 decision to Georgetown.
Despite graduation depleting CCSU of its top two scorers in 2018 NEC Tournament MVP Danielle Pearse and NEC Midfielder of the Year Charlotte Maurer, as well as NEC Goalkeeper of the Year Ashley Cavanaugh, the Blue Devils remain strong and stingy on the defensive side and pack some punch on the offensive end.
The Blue Devils will bring back reigning NEC Defensive Player of the Year
Shauny Alterisio (Danbury, CT/Immaculate) and first team All-NEC defender
Emily Hogan (Warwick, RI/Bishop Feehan) for their senior campaigns. Alterisio and Hogan helped guide a defensive unit that only allowed 13 goals all season, the fewest in the league. Central’s .636 goals against average ranked 20th in the country.
Sophomore midfielder
Roma McLaughlin (Donegal, Ireland/Moville Community College), who took home NEC Rookie of the Year honors last season, stands as one of the Blue Devils’ top scoring returnees after tallying two goals and five assists during her freshman campaign. Junior
Jenna Rae Covello (Plymouth, CT/Terryville), who recorded an assist and netted the game winning goal in the 89th minute in last year’s NEC Championship Game, finished the season with seven points and will look to build on her championship game heroics for the Blue Devils in 2019.
Now in his 20th season as head coach, five-time NEC Coach of the Year Mick D’Arcy will look to lead CCSU to the program’s tenth tournament title, and first repeat championship since winning four in a row from 2002-05.
Last year’s tournament runner up and four-time league champion Saint Francis U enters the year under new leadership with Ellie Davis at the helm of the program.
Back in Loretto for her senior season is forward
Alyssa McGhee (Altoona, PA/Bishop Guilfoyle). In 2017, McGhee led the NEC as a sophomore with 10 goals and was named the league’s Offensive Player Year. Last season, McGhee was named a second team All-Conference performer, finishing tied for first in the league with six assists and fourth with 18 points. Along with McGhee, the Red Flash return two other All-Conference second team standouts – junior midfielder
Aubrey Suydam (Lancaster, PA/Manheim Central) and redshirt senior goalkeeper
Julia Hernan (Collegeville, PA/The Hill School), who ranked second on the circuit with a 1.03 GAA.
The Red Flash maintain the longest active postseason streak in the conference, advancing to the NEC Tournament nine consecutive seasons.
Picked to finish in the top-three for the fifth year in a row, Fairleigh Dickinson made its sixth straight NEC Tournament appearance in 2018. The Knights will field a veteran team in 2019, returning nine members of their starting 11, and 13 out of the 15 who took to the pitch in last year’s NEC tournament semifinal.
Senior midfielder
Stasi Torchia (Pickering, Ontario/St. Mary’s) and junior defender
Samantha Roff (Canberra, Australia/Radford College) - a pair of first team All-NEC honorees - and 2018 leading scorer
Viktorija Miseljic (Nis, Serbia/Milenko Hadzic) (6 goals, 2 assists) headline a core group of Knights looking to lead FDU to its first NEC title since 2015.
After finishing in fourth place each of the last two years, Bryant was picked to once again finish fourth in 2019. The Bulldogs are led by two-time first team All-NEC defender, junior
Jamie Irwin (Succasunna, NJ/Roxbury), and also return second teamers in junior forward
Amanda Spitaleri (Ronkonkoma, NY/Connetquot) and senior midfielder
Remi Manna (Pleasantville, NY/Pleasantville). Spitaleri paced the Bulldogs with five goals and Manna added a pair of markers.
More than any other team in recent memory, Mount St. Mary’s defied preseason expectations last season. The Mount were picked last in the preseason poll, but ended up finishing in third place, qualifying for their first NEC Tournament since 1997. Now looking to make consecutive postseason appearances for the first time since the mid-90’s, the Mountaineers begin their journey forecasted to finish fifth.
Sacred Heart comes into the 2019 season sitting at number six in the preseason poll, with Robert Morris at seventh, followed by Empire State foes LIU and Wagner at eighth and ninth, respectively.
Rounding out the preseason poll are the two newest NEC women’s soccer programs. St. Francis Brooklyn begins its inaugural season on August 22nd at Brooklyn Bridge Park against Lafayette, while Merrimack enter its first DI season on August 25th hosting Hartford. The Warriors will play a full NEC schedule and count in the standings, but are ineligible for the postseason as they complete a four-year reclassification.
Following a round-robin regular season, the top four teams will qualify for the 2019 NEC Women’s Soccer Championship, taking place at the home of the highest seed on November 8th & 10th.
About The Northeast Conference
Now entering its 39th year, the Northeast Conference is an NCAA Division I collegiate athletic association consisting of 11 institutions of higher learning located throughout seven states. Media coverage of the NEC extends to four of the largest markets in the United States - New York (#1), Boston (#9), Pittsburgh (#24), Baltimore (#26), and Hartford/New Haven (#33). Founded in 1981 as the basketball-only ECAC Metro Conference, the NEC has grown to sponsor 22 championship sports for men and women and now enjoys automatic access to 15 different NCAA Championships. NEC member institutions include Bryant, Central Connecticut, Fairleigh Dickinson, LIU Brooklyn, Merrimack, Mount St. Mary’s, Robert Morris, Sacred Heart, St. Francis Brooklyn, Saint Francis U and Wagner.For more information on the NEC, visit the league’s official website (
www.northeastconference.org) and digital network (
www.necfrontrow.com), or follow the league on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram and Snapchat, all @NECsports.