Friday, May 16th, 2008

Squad looks to continue winning streak

Team is undefeated after 26 games in Westwood

  EDWARD LIN/Daily Bruin Senior Staff Sophomore forward Sarah-Gayle Swanson leaps over a Dayton defender in last week's win.

By Eli Karon

Daily Bruin Contributor



There’s no place like home, there’s no place like home, there’s no place like home.

For the No. 3 UCLA women’s soccer team, Dorothy’s famous words hold a lot of truth. The Bruins are in the midst of a 26-game home undefeated streak, thanks to a school-record 20th victory of the season over Dayton last weekend.

However, the Bruins will face one of their toughest tests of the season when No. 6 Florida travels to Westwood for Sunday’s quarterfinal match.

“Florida is obviously a good team, and I know some of their personalities quite well,” UCLA head coach Jillian Ellis said. “We’ve been marching through these games. We have one more and then we can dream a little bit.”

The two teams are eerily similar. UCLA has an overall record of 20-2-0. Florida has an overall record of 20-3-1. UCLA is the 2001 Pac-10 champion. Florida is the 2001 SEC champion. Each team is advancing to the quarterfinal following 3-1 victories in the previous round. It is the third time in both schools’ history that their respective teams are in the quarterfinals.

It gets better. The teams have played each other two times in the past, with each team having won a game. Both teams have stars in contention for three separate Player of the Year awards. UCLA’s Mary-Frances Monroe and Florida’s Abby Wambach, who leads the nation in scoring, are both in the running for the M.A.C. Award, the Hermann Trophy and Soccer Buzz Player of the Year honors.

For now, the advantage lies with the Bruins. Their ball-possession style of play and the wide-open Drake stadium field complement each other nicely. And with stars like Monroe (28 points), Stephanie Rigamat (30 points) and Krista Boling (two-time first team All-Pac 10), the Bruins are looking to prolong their season.

The biggest test for the Bruins will be containing Abby Wambach, the nation’s leading scorer this year with a staggering 75 points (31 goals, 13 assists).

“Obviously she’s scored a lot of goals this year, so she’s a definite threat,” UCLA assistant coach Lisa Shattuck said. “We’re going to take extra caution. I think the (defenders) we have can definitely stop her.”

Sunday’s one o’clock match will finally sever the tie that closely binds these two teams. One will head to Dallas, Texas, for the College Cup while the other packs up and heads back home.

“With each game, the stakes get a little higher,” Shattuck said. “Obviously we have a home-field advantage, and I think our team plays well when the stakes are high.”

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