2016 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship

2016 NCAA Men's Soccer Tournament
College Cup
Country United States
Dates November 17 – December 11, 2016
Teams 48
Matches played 44
Goals scored 118 (2.68 per match)
All statistics correct as of December 3, 2016.

The 2016 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship (also known as the 2016 College Cup) will be the 58th annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of NCAA Division I men's collegiate soccer. The first, second, third, and quarterfinal rounds will be held at college campus sites across the United States during November and December 2016, with host sites determined by seeding and record. The four-team College Cup finals will be played at BBVA Compass Stadium in Houston, Texas from December 9–11, 2016.[1]

The defending national champion is the Stanford Cardinal.

Qualification

All Division I men's soccer programs except for Grand Canyon, Incarnate Word, and UMass Lowell will be eligible to qualify for the tournament. Those three programs are ineligible because they are in transition from Division II to Division I. The tournament field remains fixed at 48 teams.

Of the 24 schools that had previously won the championship, 13 qualified for this year's tournament.

Format

As in previous editions of the NCAA Division I Tournament, the tournament features 48 participants out of a possible field of 203 teams. Of the 48 berths, 24 are allocated to the 21 conference tournament champions and to the regular season winners of the Ivy League, Pac-12 Conference, and West Coast Conference, which do not have tournaments. The remaining 24 berths are supposed to be determined through an at-large process based upon the Ratings Percentage Index (RPI) of teams that did not automatically qualify.

The NCAA Selection Committee also names the top sixteen seeds for the tournament, with those teams receiving an automatic bye into the second round of the tournament. The remaining 32 teams play in a single-elimination match in the first round of the tournament for the right to play a seeded team in the second round.

Seeded teams
Seed School Conference Record Berth type NSCAA Ranking[2] RPI Ranking[3]
1 Maryland Big Ten 18–0–2 Tournament Champion 1 1
2 Wake Forest ACC 15–2–3 Tournament Champion 2 3
3 Clemson ACC 13–3–4 At Large 3 2
4 Louisville ACC 12–5–2 At Large 9 6
5 Stanford PAC-12 11–3–4 Tournament Champion 8 5
6 Denver Summit 17–0–3 Tournament Champion 4 7
7 Indiana Big Ten 11–1–7 At Large 7 15
8 Syracuse ACC 11–4–3 At Large 6 9
9 North Carolina ACC 11–3–3 At Large 10 10
10 Charlotte C-USA 12–3–2 At Large 5 14
11 Washington Pac-12 13–6–0 At Large 14 8
12 Virginia ACC 10–3–5 At Large 17 20
13 Notre Dame ACC 11–7–2 At Large 20 13
14 Albany America East 12–5–2 Tournament Champion RV 12
15 Butler Big East 13–5–1 Tournament Champion 15 11
16 Kentucky C-USA 11–4–3 At Large 19 18

Schedule

Round Date
First round November 17, 2016
Second round November 20, 2016
Third round November 26–27, 2016
Quarterfinals December 2 − 4, 2016
College Cup: Semifinals December 9, 2016
College Cup Final December 11, 2016

Bracket

Regional 1

  First round Second round Third round Quarterfinals
                                     
        
  1  Maryland 4  
     Providence 5  
   Providence 2
   Delaware 0  
   Providence 2  
   Creighton 1  
   Creighton 3  
   Tulsa 0  
   Creighton 3
    16  Kentucky 2  
      
        
   Providence 0
  9  North Carolina 1
        
        
  9  North Carolina 2OT 3
     Florida Gulf Coast 2  
   South Florida 2(0)
   Florida Gulf Coast PK 2(3)  
  9  North Carolina 2OT 1
  8  Syracuse 0  
   Dartmouth 2OT 1  
   St. Francis Brooklyn 0  
   Dartmouth 0
    8  Syracuse 3  
      

Regional 2

  First round Second round Third round Quarterfinals
                                     
        
  5  Stanford 2  
     Pacific 0  
   CSUN 0
   Pacific 1  
  5  Stanford 2OT 1  
  12  Virginia 0  
   Vermont 4  
   Rider 1  
   Vermont 1
    12  Virginia 2OT 2  
      
        
  5  Stanford 2
  4  Louisville 0
        
        
  13  Notre Dame 1
     Loyola-Chicago 0  
   Loyola-Chicago 2
   UIC 0  
  13  Notre Dame 1
  4  Louisville 3  
   UCLA 4  
   Colgate 2  
   UCLA 1
    4  Louisville OT 2  
      

Regional 3

  First round Second round Third round Quarterfinals
                                     
        
  3  Clemson 2OT 2  
     South Carolina 1  
   South Carolina 1
   Mercer 0  
  3  Clemson 3  
  14  Albany 1  
   Boston College 1  
   Fordham 0  
   Boston College 0
    14  Albany 3  
      
        
  3  Clemson 0
  6  Denver 1
        
        
  11  Washington 4
     New Mexico 1  
   New Mexico PK 0(6)
   Portland 0(5)  
  11  Washington 1
  6  Denver 2  
   San Diego State 1(5)  
   UNLV PK 1(6)  
   UNLV 0
    6  Denver 3  
      

Regional 4

  First round Second round Third round Quarterfinals
                                     
        
  7  Indiana 1  
     Akron 0  
   Akron 2
   Villanova 0  
  7  Indiana 1  
   Virginia Tech OT 2  
   Virginia Tech 1  
   East Tennessee State 0  
   Virginia Tech 3
    10  Charlotte 2  
      
        
   Virginia Tech 0
  2  Wake Forest 2
        
        
  15  Butler 0(4)
     SIUE PK 0(5)  
   Michigan State 1(8)
   SIUE PK 1(9)  
   SIUE 1
  2  Wake Forest 2  
   Coastal Carolina 2  
   Radford 1  
   Coastal Carolina 0
    2  Wake Forest 2  
      

Results

First round

Second round

Third round

Quarterfinals

College Cup

Semifinals

National Championship

Statistics

Goalscorers

Players still active in the tournament are highlighted in bold.

4 goals
  • Germany Julian Gressel — Providence
3 goals
  • France Alex Happi — Clemson
  • United States Foster Langsdorf — Stanford
  • Canada Brian Wright — Vermont
  • Ghana Nico Quashie — Virginia Tech
2 goals
  • United States Nick Hinds — Akron
  • United States Austen Burnikel — Clemson
  • United States Kortne Ford — Denver
  • Spain Albert Ruiz — Florida Gulf Coast
  • United States Tate Schmitt — Louisville
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Amar Sejdič — Maryland
  • United States Tucker Hume — North Carolina
  • Republic of Ireland Jon Gallagher — Notre Dame
  • Colombia Sergio Carmago — Syracuse
  • Ghana Abu Danladi — UCLA
  • Costa Rica Marcelo Acuña — Virginia Tech
  • Spain Jon Bakero — Wake Forest
  • Ghana Ema Twumasi — Wake Forest
1 goal
  • Puerto Rico Carlos Clark — Albany
  • Brazil Bernardo Mattos — Albany
  • Brazil Afonso Pinheiro — Albany
  • Chile Nico Solabarrieta — Albany
  • Bermuda Zeiko Lewis — Boston College
  • United States Brandt Bronico — Charlotte
  • England Daniel Bruce — Charlotte
  • Iceland Einar Einarsson — Coastal Carolina
  • Haiti Frantzdy Pierrot — Coastal Carolina
  • United States Zach Pagani — Colgate
  • United States Bruno Scodari — Colgate
  • United States Myles Englis — Creighton
  • United States Mitch LaGro — Creighton
  • United States Ricky Lopez-Espin — Creighton
  • Mexico Ricardo Perez — Creighton
  • Sweden Joel Rydstrand — Creighton
  • United States Karim Sawaf — Creighton
  • United States Matt Danilack — Dartmouth
  • United States Chandler Crosswait — Denver
  • United States Scott DeVoss — Denver
  • Brazil Andre Shinyashiki — Denver
  • United States Alex Underwood — Denver
  • Spain Robert Ferrer — Florida Gulf Coast
  • United States Justin Gavin — Florida Gulf Coast
  • United States Grant Lillard — Indiana
  • United States Billy McConnell — Indiana
  • United States Kevin Barajas — Kentucky
  • United States J. J. Williams — Kentucky
  • Senegal Cherif Dieye — Louisville
  • United States Jack Gayton — Louisville
  • Senegal Mohamed Thiaw — Louisville
  • United States Kevin Engesser — Loyola-Chicago
  • United States Alec Lasinski — Loyola-Chicago
  • Germany Gordon Wild — Maryland
  • United States Eryk Williamson — Maryland
  • Canada Michael Marcantognini — Michigan State
  • United States Patrick Khouri — New Mexico
  • Germany Nils Bruening — North Carolina
  • United States Jeremy Kelly — North Carolina
  • United States Drew Murphy — North Carolina
  • United States Tariq Branche — Pacific
  • United States Danny Griffin — Providence
  • United States Steven Kilday — Providence
  • United States Brendan Reardon — Providence
  • United States Nick Sailor — Providence
  • Portugal João Serrano — Providence
  • England Fraser Colmer — Radford
  • France Arthur Herpreck — Rider
  • United States A. J. Vergara — San Diego State
  • United States Tomas Hilliard-Arce — Stanford
  • United States Sam Werner — Stanford
  • United States Austin Ledbetter — SIU Edwardsville
  • United States Keegan McHugh — SIU Edwardsville
  • United States Kevin Walker — South Carolina
  • United States Marcus Epps — South Florida
  • South Africa Lindo Mfeka — South Florida
  • Canada Chris Nanco — Syracuse
  • Mexico José Hernández — UCLA
  • United States Kike Poleo — UCLA
  • United States Willie Raygoza — UCLA
  • United States Adam Musovski — UNLV
  • Iceland Jon Arnar Barðdal — Vermont
  • Canada Stefan Lamanna — Vermont
  • Guatemala Pablo Aguilar — Virginia
  • United States Paddy Foss — Virginia
  • United States Brendan Moyers — Virginia Tech
  • United States Forrest White — Virginia Tech
  • Spain Luis Argudo — Wake Forest
  • United States Jacori Hayes — Wake Forest
  • United States Beau Blanchard — Washington
  • Canada Scott Menzies — Washington
  • United States Elijah Rice — Washington
  • United States Justin Schmidt — Washington
  • United States Steven Wright — Washington
Own goals
  • United States Tanner Dieterich — Clemson (playing against South Carolina)
  • United States Kaelon Fox — Kentucky (playing against Creighton)

See also

Notes

  1. Syracuse played their home match at David W. Murphy Field, on the campus Onondaga Community College, instead of their regular stadium SU Soccer Stadium, due to field conditions from snowy conditions.[4]

References

  1. "2014-18 NCAA Championship Sites". NCAA & Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. Retrieved 22 October 2016.
  2. http://www.nscaatv.com/rankings/college
  3. "Division I Men's College Soccer - Rankings - NCAA.com". NCAA.com.
  4. Kramer, Lindsay (November 25, 2016). "Field conditions force venue change for Syracuse soccer's NCAA Tournament game on Sunday". Syracuse.com. The Post-Standard. Retrieved November 27, 2016.
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