Sophomore Johan Torstensson's first goal of the season was a big
one as it lifted the Ravens to a 1-0 double-overtime win over Le
Moyne in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament. PHOTO BY
Andrew Katsampes.
|
Torstensson's double-overtime winner leads sixth-seeded Ravens
past third-seeded Dolphins; Second-seeded Dowling up next on
Sunday
Boxscore
BROOKHAVEN, N.Y. (November
14, 2008) - Sixth-seeded Franklin Pierce opened its
National Championship defense with a 1-0 double-overtime victory
over third-seeded Le Moyne College in opening round action of the
2008 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship's East Regional,
hosted by Dowling College, at Golden Lions Field this afternoon.
Franklin Pierce (13-7-2) advances
to the East Regional semifinal round to face second-seeded and No.
12-ranked Dowling (16-3-0) on Sunday at 1 p.m. The match up will
feature the last two Division II Champions, with the Golden Lions
capturing the title in 2006 followed by the Ravens last season. Le
Moyne caps its season with a 13-6-3 overall record, 9-3-1 in the
Northeast-10 Conference.
"I thought we competed well and
played comfortable right from the get-go against a difficult
opponent," said Franklin Pierce head coach Marco
Koolman. "The boys carried out the game plan the way we
wanted, they worked hard and were able to shut down their primary
offensive threats which made it difficult for them."
Sophomore midfielder Johan
Torstensson (Falköping, Sweden) decided the match
with his first goal of the season. Senior Frantz Francois
(Saint-Marc, Haiti/Palm Beach Lakes (Fla.)) assisted on
the marker.
Freshman Vinny Papageorgiou made seven saves to preserve his eighth
shutout of the season. PHOTO BY Andrew Katsampes.
|
Freshman Vinny Papageorgiou
(Wilmington, Mass./Wilmington) made seven saves (six first
half) to preserve his eighth shutout of the season for Franklin
Pierce. Le Moyne placed seven of its eight shots in the match on
target, but Franklin Pierce posted an 18-8 advantage in shots
overall - including 10-2 after halftime. Junior Steve White
(Cortland, N.Y./Cortland) made three stops in goal for the
Dolphins.
Franklin Pierce dominated
possession and the stat sheet, but lacked that last bit of
finishing quality until Torstensson's winner 5:23 before the match
would have been decided by penalty kicks. The Ravens placed just
four of its 18 shots on target in the afternoon.
Torstensson emerged from a scramble
on the right side of the penalty area and took a short pass from
Francois before firing a shot from five yards out into the right
corner of the net. The goal was the third of Torstensson's two-year
career, while Francois picked up his fifth assist of the season.
"The main thing for us, as it has
been all year, is finding the net or pulling the trigger," said
Koolman. "We got to a stage of the game when Le Moyne seemed to be
struggling and Frantz was able to free himself and pull the keeper
off his line and found Johan for a nice finish."