UC Santa Barbara Gauchos men's soccer

American college soccer team From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The UC Santa Barbara Gauchos men's soccer team is an NCAA Division I college soccer team composed of student-athletes attending the University of California, Santa Barbara. The Gauchos play their home matches at Harder Stadium. Like most of the other UC Santa Barbara Gauchos athletic teams, the men's soccer team competes in the Big West Conference.

Founded1966; 60 years ago (1966)
Athletic directorKelly Barsky
Head coachTim Vom Steeg (25th season)
Quick facts UC Santa Barbara Gauchos men's soccer, Founded ...
UC Santa Barbara Gauchos
men's soccer
Founded1966; 60 years ago (1966)
UniversityUniversity of California, Santa Barbara
Athletic directorKelly Barsky
Head coachTim Vom Steeg (25th season)
ConferenceBig West
LocationSanta Barbara, California, US
StadiumHarder Stadium
(capacity: 17,000)
NicknameGauchos
ColorsBlue and gold[1]
   
Home
Away
NCAA tournament championships
2006
NCAA tournament runner-up
2004
NCAA tournament College Cup
2004, 2006
NCAA tournament Quarterfinals
2004, 2006, 2019
NCAA tournament Round of 16
2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2015, 2019
NCAA tournament appearances
2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2019, 2021, 2024
Conference tournament championships
2010, 2021
Conference Regular Season championships
2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2021, 2025*
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The UCSB Gauchos won the 2006 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. The program has produced 19 All-American selections, all but one of which since 2002, and over 60 players who have gone on to play professionally or represent their senior national teams.[2]

Each season from 2007 to 2015, the Gauchos were recognized by the NCAA as the men's attendance champions by average attendance (men's and women's inclusive across Division I, II, and III) – the longest such recorded streak in the NCAA record books.[3] The program holds the top six all-time NCAA soccer records for largest regular season attendances at on-campus venues (men's and women's inclusive across Division I, II, and III).[4][5] This is highlighted by the top all-time mark of 15,896 fans packed into Harder Stadium on September 24, 2010, when UC Santa Barbara hosted UCLA for their regular season match, despite the Santa Barbara County Fire Marshal turning fans away at the gates for fear of filling the stadium over capacity.[6][7][8]

History

Humble beginnings

UC Santa Barbara fielded its first men's soccer team in 1966 but didn't compete in the Big West Conference until 1983.[9] The Gauchos had mixed success, with good seasons (1983, 1988) alongside bad seasons (1991, 1992), but never found prolonged stretches of success or failure.[10]

The Big West Conference stopped sponsoring men's soccer after the 1991 season but re-instituted it before the 2001 season.[9] During this period, UCSB competed in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation. The return of soccer to the Big West Conference marked the rough beginning of the Gauchos' greatest success to date.[9]

Vom Steeg era

In January 1999, UC Santa Barbara's athletic director, Gary Cunningham, was successfully able to hire former UCSB and professional soccer player, Tim Vom Steeg, away from Santa Barbara City College to lead the Gauchos' program.[11][12] The Gauchos won the 2001 Big West Conference championship for the first time in their history, but missed out on a trip to the NCAA Tournament since the Big West Conference was ineligible for an automatic bid.[13] UC Santa Barbara have won eight Big West regular season championships (2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2013, 2014) and have won the Big West tournament in 2010.[10]

2004 NCAA Championships

The Gauchos burst onto the national scene in 2004 during their run at the 2004 NCAA Championship. The showing in this tournament established UC Santa Barbara as a force in college soccer, with UCSB marching to the finals before losing out on penalties to Indiana.

2006 NCAA Championships

Santa Barbara national champions visiting president George W. Bush (who is posing with a #1 shirt with his name) at the White House in 2006

The crowning achievement of the men's soccer program took place in 2006, when UCSB won the NCAA Division I Championship in a 2–1 decision over UCLA. It marked the program's first championship and only the university's second athletics championship (1979 Men's Water Polo).

At one point during the season, UCSB's record stood at 7–6 with dim prospects for postseason glory. However, a 5–1 stretch to close the regular season raised morale. The Gauchos made the NCAA Tournament as an unseeded team. During their championship run, the unseeded Gauchos defeated San Diego State at home, then #1 ranked/#3 seeded SMU followed by Old Dominion on the road, and finally Northwestern before an NCAA season-high 8,784 people at Harder Stadium in Santa Barbara. This propelled the Gauchos into the Final Four and earned them a trip to the College Cup held at Hermann Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri.

UCSB needed extra time to defeat #2 seed Wake Forest 0–0 (4–3 on penalties) in their first match of the College Cup. The final was a matchup between Southern California teams as UCLA advanced on a 4–0 win over Virginia. The 8th-ranked and seeded Bruins served as the final team to fall to the Gauchos by a score of 2–1 to complete UCSB's magical season.

Players

Current squad

As of August 22, 2025[14]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

More information No., Pos. ...
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Notable former players

Coaching staff

Current technical staff

As of August 22, 2025[15]
More information Position, Name ...
Position Name
Head coach Tim Vom Steeg
Associate head coach Greg Wilson
Goalkeeper coach Matias Fernandez
Assistant coach Carson Vom Steeg
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Head coaching history

As of December 2025

Source:[16][17]

More information #, Nat. ...
# Nat. Name Tenure Record Win %
1Zolton von Smogyi1966–7132–21–6.593
2Sandy Guess1972–739–13–3.420
3Sandy Guess / Ken Reeves19745–6–4.467
4United StatesAlan Meeder1975–7842–26–5.610
5John Purcell1979–8015–17–5.473
6Andy Kuenzli1981–8995–64–21.586
7Cliff Draeger1990–9115–20–2.432
8Mark Arya1992–9840–84–6.331
9United StatesTim Vom Steeg1999–Present314–144–66.662
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Rivalries

Cal Poly

Chosen as the #1 "Greatest Rivalry In College Soccer" by CollegeSoccerNews.com, the main rival of the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos soccer team is the Cal Poly Mustangs men's soccer team.[18] The rivalry is a part of the larger Blue–Green Rivalry, which encompasses all sports from the two schools. With both schools located on the Central Coast less than 100 miles apart, attendance has risen dramatically following the Gauchos' 2006 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. The crowds of these games are record-setting and are among the highest regular-season games in NCAA college soccer history.

Titles

Sources:[19][20]

National

More information Championship, Title # ...
Championship Title # Season Rival (final) Score
NCAA tournament
1
2006UCLA
2–1
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Conference

More information Conference, Championship ...
Conference Championship Titles Winning years
Big WestTournament
2
2010, 2021
Regular season
12
2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2021, 2025[n 1]
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Notes
  1. Title shared with UC Irvine and Cal Poly

NCAA appearances

The UC Santa Barbara Gauchos have an NCAA Division I Tournament record of 23–13–1 through fifteen appearances.[21]

Key
More information Year, Stage ...
Year Stage Rival Res. Score
2002First roundSan DiegoW2–0
Second roundCaliforniaL1–2
2003Second roundCaliforniaW2–0
Third roundSt. John'sL2–3
2004Second roundMilwaukeeW2–1
Third roundUNC GreensboroW1–0
QuarterfinalsVCUW4–1
SemifinalsDukeW5–0
FinalIndianaL1–2
2005First roundSan Diego StateW2–0
Second roundCSU NorthridgeL2–3
2006First roundSan Diego State2–1
Second roundSMUW3–1
Third roundOld DominionW2–1
QuarterfinalsNorthwesternW3–2
SemifinalsWake ForestW1–0
FinalUCLAW2–1
2007Second roundWashingtonW1–0
Third roundOhio StateL3–4
2008Second roundCaliforniaL2–3
2009First roundWoffordW1–0
Second roundSan DiegoW1–0
Third roundUCLAL1–2
2010First roundDenverW1–0
Second roundCaliforniaL1–2
2011Second roundProvidenceW3–2
Third roundCreightonL1–2
2013Second roundPenn StateL0–1
2015Second roundSouth CarolinaW1–0
Third roundClemsonL2–3
2019First roundCaliforniaW3–1
Second roundSaint Mary'sW4–0
Third roundIndianaW1–0
QuarterfinalsWake ForestL0–1
2021First roundUCLAL1–2
2024First roundUCLAW1–0
Second roundStanfordL2–2 (5–6 p)
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References

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