When the women's soccer team takes the pitch at Berman
Field tonight at 7 p.m., it will have the chance to end two streaks:
No. 8 Princeton's nine-game winning streak and its own eight-game losing
streak. The Red (4-9-2, 1-4-0 Ivy) will try to spoil the Tigers'
momentum, as Princeton's only loss this season came over a month ago.
"[Tonight's game] gives us a chance to test ourselves
against the best in the league and one of the best teams in the
country," said head coach Berhane Andeberhan. "We competed well against
them the last couple of years, although they were the better team."
On Tuesday night against Buffalo, senior co-captain
Emily Wyffels helped the Red jump out to the early lead in the sixth
minute, as she scored her first collegiate goal off of a Buffalo
turnover. The Bulls netted the equalizer off a free kick in the 31st
minute, and then went ahead for good in the 53rd minute. The Red
welcomed junior co-captain Shannon Fraser back to the starting lineup.
She hasn't started the last three games due to a hamstring injury.
"She's only 70 percent, but her effect is so
immeasurable because all of sudden, our midfield is more effective
because they have a target," Andeberhan said. "She and Emily read each
other well and they're complimentary. The two of them were driving the
four fullbacks of Buffalo crazy. Their ability to hold the ball together
also gave our midfield the ability to attack."
The Red has played some close contests against the
Tigers in recent years. Last season at Princeton, junior Kara Ishikawa
scored the team's only goal in the 18th minute, but the Tigers took the
lead for good before the half was over and shut down the Cornell
offense.
"Kara Ishikawa scored a great goal which showed her
technical and tactical advancement and superiority, it was a magical
goal," Andeberhan said. "[Princeton] scored two goals which showed their
physical superiority. They just crossed the ball in the box and
outjumped us."
Princeton boasts one of the most dangerous players in
the conference in 2003 Ivy League Player of the Year Esmeralda Negron.
Negron's 11 goals and eight assists are tops in the conference, and she
had played particularly well against the Red, recording three goals and
an assist in three career games against Cornell. Emily Behncke is
another scoring threat for the Tigers, as she is the league's third
leading scorer with eight goals and four assists. In goal, Madeleine
Jackson and Emily Vogelzang have been splitting time all season, and
both keepers have a goals against average under 0.60.
The Red will utilize team defense, with the defenders
playing man-to-man on the ball side and zone on the other side. While
Negron is sure to be a scoring threat, Andeberhan will not have senior
back Natalie Dew mark her during the game.
"We will still play our regular system and have
Natalie play as the defensive midfielder. She will on occasion be
helping out and will occasionally defend as a one-to-one back,"
Andeberhan said. "She has such dynamic range and good reading ability
that we try leave her free to go help out."
Friday, October 29, 2004
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