Wake Forest exploits defensive miscues, downs U.Va.
The Virginia men’s soccer team suffered its worst defeat of the season Friday, losing 4-1 to No. 18 Wake Forest in a critical home matchup.
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The Virginia men’s soccer team suffered its worst defeat of the season Friday, losing 4-1 to No. 18 Wake Forest in a critical home matchup.
The road to the postseason remains arduous for the Virginia men’s soccer team. Friday night the squad squares off against yet another nationally ranked opponent — ACC rival No. 18 Wake Forest.
The Virginia men’s soccer team stormed back from an early deficit Tuesday evening to earn a scintillating, next-to-last-minute 2-1 victory against No. 23 High Point. The win erased some of the disappointment of failing to score in the squad’s previous outing Friday, a 1-0 decision at No. 1 Maryland.
The Virginia men’s soccer team, playing its seventh match in the last 22 days, sputtered to a 2-0 home loss against ACC rival Clemson on a rain-soaked field Friday night.
It wasn’t official. It wasn’t a game or a scrimmage or even a practice. Just the guys getting together to play some soccer on a tranquil summer afternoon in 2011 before the team’s grueling preseason began. It was supposed to be fun.
The Virginia men’s soccer team had its four match unbeaten streak snapped Friday night in a closely contested 1-0 loss to No. 8 North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
Virginia self-reported the rules violations that prompted the NCAA to declare men’s soccer player Ari Dimas ineligible for the remainder of the 2012 season.
The rain, which came down in tempestuous waves all day Tuesday, held off long enough during the night for the Virginia men’s soccer team to notch a 2-0 win against Drexel.
The Virginia men’s soccer team looks to overcome a suddenly short-handed roster as it closes out a six-game homestand against Drexel Tuesday night.
The NCAA dealt Virginia men’s soccer devastating news Monday, ruling that senior captain Ari Dimas will be ineligible to compete for the remainder of the season.
The Virginia men’s soccer team came tantalizingly close to adding another signature victory to its early season résumé Friday night at home against No. 24 Xavier. Instead, a late goal by Musketeer junior midfielder Gino De Paoli forced the Cavaliers to settle for a 1-1 draw.
Success is self-perpetuating. At least that’s what the Virginia men’s soccer team — currently on a two-game winning streak — is hoping as it approaches Friday night’s home showdown against No. 24 Xavier.
The Virginia men’s soccer team won in unusual fashion Tuesday night, as the Cavaliers finally secured a win without one of the down-to-the-wire results that have become the team’s signature.
The Virginia men’s soccer team continues its six-game homestand Tuesday night as it welcomes Mount St. Mary’s to Klöckner Stadium at 7 p.m.
Even if your only connection to sports journalism is through Twitter, chances are that you are well aware of that rule. Everybody knows it’s a no-no.
The Cavaliers (2-2, 1-0 ACC) were in control for the majority of the contest but could not find the breakthrough goal for nearly 60 minutes.
Win now.
The Virginia men’s soccer team’s first homestand should be seen as nothing less than promising, despite ending on a down note.
Young and inexperienced. That’s the stigma surrounding the Virginia men’s soccer team as it enters the 2012-13 season, and it is a difficult one to dispute.
After the Virginia-North Carolina basketball game last weekend, I felt naive. Naive for sincerely believing we had a chance to pull off the upset, believing it up until Jontel Evans’ last-second heave, which had more of a chance of shattering the backboard than going through the net.