List of Men's Soccer Academic All-America Team Members of the Year

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Awarded forThe yearly outstanding men's college soccer Academic All-America team member
CountryUnited States and Canada
Most recentMarcus Caldeira, West Virginia
Sverre Orten, Gannon
Johnny Troiano, Rowan
Mario Goic, SCAD Savannah
Men's Soccer Academic All-America Team Members of the Year
Awarded forThe yearly outstanding men's college soccer Academic All-America team member
CountryUnited States and Canada
Presented byCollege Sports Communicators
History
Most recentMarcus Caldeira, West Virginia
Sverre Orten, Gannon
Johnny Troiano, Rowan
Mario Goic, SCAD Savannah
Next ceremony2026
WebsiteOfficial site

The Men's Soccer Academic All-America Team Member of the Year is the annual most outstanding singular college soccer athlete of the set of male soccer athletes selected for the Academic All-America Teams in a given year. The Academic All-America program recognizes combined athletic and academic excellence of the nation's top student-athletes because the All-America teams are selected based on excellence in both classroom achievement and athletic competition performance by the College Sports Communicators (CSC, known before the 2022–23 school year as College Sports Information Directors of America, or CoSIDA). Currently, an Academic All-District team of honorees based on CSC member nominations and voting in each of eight geographic districts across the United States and Canada.[1] The districts are as follows: – District 1 (CT, MA, ME, NH, NY, RI, VT), District 2 (DC, DE, KY, MD, NJ, PA, WV), District 3 (NC, TN, VA), District 4 (AL, FL, GA, PR, SC), District 5 (IL, IN, MI, OH), District 6 (AR, IA, LA, MN, MO, MS, MT, ND, SD, WI, WY), – District 7 (CO, ID, KS, NE, NM, NV, OK, TX), District 8 (AK, AZ, CA, HI, OR, UT, WA, Canada).[2] First team All-District honorees make the All-America team ballots. From 1996 to 2010, this team selection process was held separately for the College and University Division. The University Division team included eligible participants from National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I member schools, while the College Division team included scholar-athletes from all of the following: NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III, National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), Canadian universities and colleges and two-year colleges. From each team one winner each was chosen from both the College and University Divisions for all twelve Academic All-America teams including soccer to be the team member of the year. Thus, all twelve Academic All-American teams (Men's and women's basketball, men's and women's soccer, men's and women's track & field/cross country, men's baseball, women's softball, men's football, women's volleyball, men's and women's swimming & diving, men's and women's tennis and men's and women's at-large teams) had one Academic All-American of the Year each of its divisions. One of these twelve sport-by-sport Academic All-Americans of the year is selected as the Academic All-America Team Members of the Year for each division.[3] The most recent men's soccer player to win the all-sports honor is Stephen Lunney of the University of Tennessee Southern (then Martin Methodist College), who received the College Division awards for the 2013–14 academic year.[4]

In 2011, the Academic All-America program was expanded from two to four divisions. NCAA Divisions II and III were separated into their own divisions, while the College Division was then restricted to non-NCAA institutions.[5] Most recently, effective with the 2018–19 school year, the College Division was split, with NAIA members now receiving their own set of awards, while in some sports Two-Year College, Canadian Institutions and any other institution not affiliated with the NCAA or NAIA also get a set of rewards under the College Division.[1] However, Football has incorporated Canada into the districts for the other 4 sets.[2]

Chris Wingert, 2003 winner

As of January 31, 2024, University of New Mexico (23) has had the most men's soccer Academic All-America honorees, just ahead of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Carnegie Mellon University with 22 each.[6] New Mexico athletes have twice been recognized with this award. Carnegie Mellon has won it three times, while MIT has yet to win the award.[7]

On August 7, 2012, Division III honoree Drew Golz of Wheaton College became the first men's soccer player to be named Division III Academic All-America Team Member of the Year. That same year Golz had been named Baseball Academic All-America Team Member of the Year, becoming the first male student-athlete to be named Academic All-America Team Member of the Year for two different sports in the same year.[8] The only other previous two-sport Academic All-America of the Year award-winner had been Cynthia Capp of West Virginia Wesleyan who had been recognized in volleyball (1990) and softball (1991).[9] On July 28, 2014, Stephen Lunney became the most recent men's soccer player to be named overall Academic All-America Team Member of the Year.[10]

Jonathan Hall of Carnegie Mellon University became the first repeat winner of this award in 2008 and 2009 in the College Division before it was split.[11][12] In the University/Division I Division, Kyle Hiebert of Missouri State Bears men's soccer repeated in 2016 and 2017.[13][14] For Division II, Eivind Austboe of Lake Forest College repeated in 2013 and 2014.[15][16] For NAIA/College Division, three different winners have repeated in back-to-back years and there was one non-consecutive repeat winner. Liam Barrett repeated in 2011 and 2013 for the Illinois Tech Scarlet Hawks.[17][18] Stephen Lunney repeated in 2013 and 2014 for the UT Southern FireHawks.[15][19] Aleksi Pahkasalo repeated in 2015 and 2016 for the Lindsey Wilson Blue Raiders.[20][21] Additionally, Kevin de Lange won twice but not consecutively during the COVID pandemic for the Shawnee State Bears.[22][23]

Tables of winners

Jason Garey, 2005 winner
Kofi Sarkodie, 2010 winner
Key
Indicates winners of the all-sports Academic All-America award.

All winners are American unless indicated otherwise.

Two-division era (2001–2010)

Men's Soccer Academic All-America Team Members of the Year (2001–2010)
Year University Division College Division
Winner School Winner School
2001 Luchi Gonzalez[24] SMU Matt Ellis[24] Ohio Northern
2002 Matt Osborne[25] George Washington Michael Lochner[25] Otterbein
2003 Chris Wingert[26] St. John's Jamaica Phillip Riley[26] Lee
2004 Matt Groenwald[27] St. John's' Patrick McGinnis[27] Colorado
2005 Jason Garey[28] Maryland Nathan Micklos[28] Rochester
2006 Matt Wideman[29] SMU Josh Warren[29] Ohio Wesleyan
2007 Sweden Anton Axelsson[30] Jacksonville Jamison Dague[30] Ohio Wesleyan
2008 Zack Simmons[11] UMass Jonathan Hall[11] Carnegie Mellon
2009 Sweden Simon Ejdemyr[12] New Mexico Jonathan Hall[12] Carnegie Mellon
2010 Kofi Sarkodie[31] Akron Zach Carr[31] Stevens

Four-division era (2011–present)

Men's Soccer Academic All-America Team Members of the Year (2011–present)
Year Division I Division II Division III College/NAIA[a]
Winner School Winner School Winner School Winner School
2011 Brian Holt[17] Creighton England Mark Anderson[17] Barry Drew Golz[17] Wheaton (IL) England Liam Barrett[17] Illinois Tech
2012 Scott Goodwin[18] North Carolina Marc Herschberger[18] MSU Denver Nate Bascom[18] Ohio Northern England Liam Barrett[18] Illinois Tech
2013 Harrison Shipp[15] Notre Dame Norway Eivind Austboe[15] LIU Post Bosnia and Herzegovina Mahir Mameledzija[15] Lake Forest Republic of Ireland Stephen Lunney[15] UT Southern
2014 New Zealand Andy Bevin[32] West Virginia Norway Eivind Austboe[16] LIU Post Brian Potocnik[33] John Carroll Republic of Ireland Stephen Lunney[19] UT Southern
2015 Patrick Hodan[34] Notre Dame Johannes Sterobo[35] Northwood Nicci Bermudes[36] Aurora Finland Aleksi Pahkasalo[20] Lindsey Wilson
2016 Ben Sampson[37] Delaware Sweden Jesper Malmstrom[38] LIU Post Andreas Fatschel[39] Carnegie Mellon Finland Aleksi Pahkasalo[21] Lindsey Wilson
2017 Kevin Politz[40] Wake Forest Spain Carlos Rubio Garcia[41] Ohio Valley Garrett Pochop[42] Simpson Lucas Prolow[43] Johnson & Wales–Denver
2018 Belgium Simon Spangenberg[44] New Mexico Germany Tilman Schober[45] Spring Hill Nikolas Angyal[46] Rochester Gary Shorrow[47] Point
2019 Anthony Bowie[48] Western Michigan Jason Zobott[49] Colorado Mines Matt Anderson[50] Baldwin Wallace Nate Foddrill[51] Spring Arbor
2020–21[b] Canada Kyle Hiebert[13] Missouri State France Alexander Vencel[52] West Texas Eric Kirby[53] Rose–Hulman Netherlands Kevin de Lange[22] Shawnee State
2021 Canada Kyle Hiebert[14] Missouri State Spain Carlos Ferrando Felis[54] Franklin Pierce Jasper Yang[55] Grinnell Jan Kuepper[56] Milligan
2022 Germany Niclas Wild[23] UNC Greensboro Germany Henri Tophoven[23] Florida Southern Justin Cross[23] Stevens Netherlands Kevin de Lange[23] Shawnee State
2023 Dylan Sing[57] Western Michigan Italy Matteo Napoletano[57] Kentucky Wesleyan Logan Falzarano[57] Johns Hopkins Argentina Guido Cacciabue[57] St. Thomas (FL)
2024 Canada Marcus Caldeira[58] West Virginia Preston Neal[58] Southern New Hampshire Nathan Donovan[58] UW–Eau Claire Germany Ricardo Rittersberger[58] Aquinas
2025 Canada Marcus Caldeira[59] West Virginia Norway Sverre Orten[59] Gannon Johnny Troiano[59] Rowan Croatia Mario Goic[59] SCAD Savannah

Notes

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI