Athletics, Fall 2017, Feature 4, Feature Stories

Not Just a Kid: Soccer Star Jose Garcia Matures On and Off the Field

Jose Garcia is a star on the soccer field, but a childhood that forced him to grow up quickly keeps him humble.

On a bright afternoon in late July, the Roosevelt senior sits in an office chair evading the blinding rays slicing through the glass in the doors at the front entrance of the Lillian and Larry Goodman Center.

He dons a black T-shirt emblazoned with the words, “Just A Kid From Wheeling” on the front.

The shirt pares down the complexities of his life into a humble statement. It matches Garcia’s quiet personality perfectly, a summary of a young man who never proclaims his athletic greatness and lofty aspirations, in spite of those qualities being apparent to those who see him in action.

He Is Not Just A Kid.

Garcia recorded 15 goals and 15 assists in his first year at Roosevelt, and was named CCAC Freshman of the Year.

One of the most prolific offensive players to don a Roosevelt University men’s soccer uniform, Garcia is one of the most talented student-athletes in the Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference (CCAC) and one of the top seniors across the country in his sport.

Though Garcia is 5-foot-8-inches tall, his play stands much more like a giant. It hovers noticeably for its creative quickness that lures a mass of opposing players his way but leaves them disenfranchised when their pursuits cannot capture possession from his swift, sweeping feet.

His ability to make teammates better by finding them in opportune spots that defenders can’t account for is uncanny, and his nose for netting goals both clutch and curvaceous in their elusive trajectories are the stuff that sports highlight shows are made to showcase.

Since his arrival at Roosevelt in 2014, Garcia has tallied 31 goals and 26 assists in just 45 matches. He lost most of his junior year in 2016 due to a preseason Jones fracture in his left foot. However, his freshman season was a debut for the ages. Bagging 15 goals and 15 assists, he was named CCAC’s Freshman of the Year.

His encore performance featured slightly fewer statistical quantities, netting 13 goals and 10 assists as defenses keyed on his whereabouts even more, but Garcia’s wizardry as the quarterback of Roosevelt’s attack led the Lakers to historic firsts: CCAC regular season and tournament titles, and a bid to the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) National Championship tournament.

“I do whatever I can to help out my teammates, I do whatever leads to winning.”

Jose Garcia (BA, ’18

“I do whatever I can to help out my teammates,” Garcia says when asked to describe his playing style. “I do whatever leads to winning.”

He Is Not Just A Kid.

While a young 21 years old, Garcia had to mature quickly at an even earlier age. “When I was about 12 or 13, it was just me, my sisters and my mom,” Garcia says. “My dad left. It was bad at the time. I became the father figure for my sisters.”

While his mom provided for the family, working nights at a local factory and often putting in 14-hour shifts to make ends meet, Garcia balanced the tremendous weight of being the man of the house before he got to high school.

Keeping his mind off this difficult situation was his favorite sport. Soccer was ingrained in him since the age of three, its seed planted by his dad when the Garcia family resided in the central Mexican city of Zacatecas.

Young Jose dribbled with his father and his dad’s friends in an environment that eats, sleeps and breathes fútbol, starting a tradition in which Garcia would cultivate his passion and skills for soccer by watching and playing the game with men who were years, even decades, older then he was.

The Garcias moved to Wheeling, Illinois when Jose was seven years old. Four years later, Garcia started playing organized soccer for the first time, joining the Real Cerezo club based in the northwest Chicago suburb.

As he picked up the sport, learning from a cornucopia of people ranging from local coaches and players to the game’s greats that he watched on TV, Garcia did not veer off course in spite of the eventual departure of his father.

He continued to embrace the game and the countless hours of work and practice that made his performance better. Garcia may have lost the presence of his father, but he didn’t lose love for the game or motivation to learn from elders.

He’d still head to the park and play soccer with anyone in the vicinity. He’d still voraciously consume any game broadcast on TV, whether it featured Mexican National Team legend and former Chicago Fire star Cuauhtémoc Blanco, or Lionel Messi and his Barcelona brethren. He’d play street soccer, transitioning from traditional natural grass surfaces or artificial turf fields to the unforgiving smoothness of pavement laid for wheels. He’d notice his two older brothers taking on opposing players rather than just running away from them, their going around defenders, and smiling with the pure joy and fun of being in the moment.

His brothers left an impression on Garcia, who was hardened by a quicker transition to adulthood in order to be a man whom his three younger sisters wanted to emulate, just as he wanted to emulate his soccer influences. They made him curious about the wonders of what is known as a “beautiful game,” and helped concoct the current iteration of Jose Garcia in every facet of his life.

He Is Not Just A Kid.

Through Roosevelt’s first 17 games of the 2017 season, Garcia tallied 11 goals and 4 assists.

Garcia was not always an agile player. “When I was playing with my club, I was a little chunkier, a little fat,” Garcia admits with a smile. “My coach played me as a midfielder at first, but I told him I couldn’t run back and forth, so he switched me to forward so I could stay up front.”

Eventually Garcia shed the extra weight, growing into a slender athletic build armed with an evolved cardiovascular capacity that allowed him to return to midfield when he played for Wheeling High School. There, he excelled early on the freshman team before he helped turn around the varsity squad, leading it to an Illinois High School Association Class 3A championship match as a senior.

It was during the latter stages of a senior season, featuring plaudits ranging from All-State to Chicago Sun-Times Player of the Year, that Garcia started to think seriously about playing in college.

Roosevelt head coach Graham Brennan thought he saw the cornerstone of his program, both on and off the pitch, in the Wheeling soccer stud. “Jose was very confident and respectful with a quiet demeanor during his senior year of high school,” Brennan recalled. “He had a team-first attitude and made everyone around him a better player and person.

“I coached one of the top club teams in the state at the time,” Brennan said. “We played Jose’s club team at the time [FC United] twice, tying both games with a combined score of 6-6. Jose scored five of the six goals in the two games. I was fully convinced at that time of how special a player he was.”

With many of his Wheeling teammates, such as goalkeeper Gary Mendoza and midfielder Marino Lopez, already committed to Roosevelt, Garcia’s familiarity and comfort level with the University only grew as Brennan made his recruiting pitch.

Along with the signing of other talented players, including future All-American Evan Trychta, Garcia was seen as a linchpin for a Lakers team built to win. Brennan convinced Garcia to sign with the Lakers, accelerating the flight of Roosevelt’s men’s soccer program to national prominence.

He Is Not Just A Kid.

Garcia celebrates one of his many goals.

While Garcia adapted to the next level of soccer seamlessly, tallying at least one goal and/or assist in each of his first nine matches, his acclimation to the rigors of a Roosevelt education was not easy. As the first member of his family to attend college, he had few places to turn for advice on the transition from high school to college. His 60-mile round-trip commute between Wheeling and downtown Chicago didn’t help.

Just as he did when he wanted to excel at soccer and set a good example for his sisters, he also did what he had to do to improve his academic standing. He put in the work. He saw how others excelled at academics and created a mix of approaches that helped him succeed.

“He developed the time management skills and study habits needed to be successful at a university,” Brennan said. “His results each semester continue to improve, and he finished as one of the top performers in the classroom this past spring on the men’s soccer roster.”

Part of the allure of Roosevelt for Garcia has been the criminal justice program. “Growing up in Wheeling, I knew a lot of people in trouble with police, gangbangers,” he says. “I really wanted to help them out, not just teenagers, but people of all ages who need advice to get out of the system.”

His introductory criminal justice course, taught by associate professor Tana McCoy, resonated with him. It piqued his interest in the field and elicited the same desire to improve that he displays in soccer.

“I love how she taught, what she believes about the criminal justice system, her experience, her smarts,” Garcia says of McCoy. “I love the whole department.”

Garcia’s post-college interests in criminal justice start with potential graduate studies and possible probation or parole-officer work. However, his lifelong goal centers on professional soccer. He has already tested potential pro prospects, including local and national tryouts in conjunction with Alianza de Futbol. He earned a chance as a finalist on Sueño Alianza, showcasing his talents against some of the nation’s top young players in front of representatives from Mexico’s top-tier clubs and Major League Soccer franchises in Florida.

During that experience in October 2014, Garcia went to a Telemundo TV set for an interview, and was surprised with a live satellite appearance by his father, who resides in Mexico. It was their first communication in nearly five years.

“It was nice to see his face and talk,” Garcia says of conversing with his dad on a giant screen that day, harboring no ill will for his father’s departure years ago. “In the end, for him to know I am doing well in life and in soccer is the best thing.”

He Is Not Just A Kid.

Entering his senior season, Garcia maintains a thirst to achieve grand results and feels he can spearhead a team effort worthy of hoisting a few more banners inside the Goodman Center gymnasium. “We have the team to make it to nationals and make a run at the national title,” Garcia says. “Personally, my goal is to be All-American, reach 20 to 30 goals, 15 assists. I have always set high standards. It makes me work hard for those goals.”

“If you’re not setting high standards, you’re going to get poor outcomes,” said Brennan, who thinks All-American status and CCAC Player of the Year are just some of the awards Garcia will earn if he is healthy and playing his best. Garcia is off to a fantastic start toward reaching those standards in 2017, scoring two goals in Roosevelt’s season-opening win over Marygrove on Aug. 22.
Both Garcia and Brennan are hoping for a prolonged postseason run. Beyond that, a pro-playing career for Garcia is the next high standard on their list.

Coaching soccer is also a possibility that could keep him immersed in the game, as he is already cutting his coaching teeth in another realm with his 18-year-old sister during her preparations for attending college.

“He shows an incredible drive to get better and improve every day. Hopefully, he will have an opportunity to play professional soccer, but I also believe he will be successful in any endeavor he pursues.”

Graham Brennan, Head Coach

“Jose is definitely gifted with the physical and mental abilities that come with the game of soccer,” Brennan said. “He shows an incredible drive to get better and improve every day. Hopefully, he will have an opportunity to play professional soccer, but I also believe he will be successful in any endeavor he pursues.”

He is not just a kid. He is not just a soccer player. 

Jose Garcia has long been a man worth emulating.

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Athletics, Feature 4, Spring 2017

Athletics Year in Review: 2016-17 Lakers Achievements

The 2016-17 year was full of achievements across the board for the Roosevelt Athletic Department as the Lakers continue their pursuit to be one of the most well-rounded venues for student-athlete success in the Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference (CCAC) and National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA).

Men’s Soccer

Roosevelt Men’s Soccer vs. Texas Wesleyan

The Roosevelt men’s soccer team entered the fall with high expectations following last year’s CCAC regular season and tournament championships. Ranked 22nd in the 2016 NAIA Preseason Top 25 Poll, the Lakers got off to a strong start with a huge 3-2 overtime road win over nine-time national champion Lindsey Wilson College in Kentucky.

Jose Garcia on the soccer field

Jose Garcia

Injuries to key players, including 2015 CCAC Player of the Year Evan Trychta and All-CCAC First Team catalyst Jose Garcia, slowed down Roosevelt’s momentum and led to a double-overtime quarterfinal ouster in the CCAC tourney. However, with Garcia back from injury this fall and head coach Graham Brennan’s 52-21-6 record in the past four seasons, there is optimism for even more men’s soccer success to come once the 2017 campaign rolls around.

Women’s Soccer

Anna Agboola on the soccer field

Anna Agboola

Head Coach Roland Hahn continues to lead the Roosevelt women’s soccer team to progress on and off the pitch. Newcomer Anna Agboola had a debut season to remember in fall 2016, as she led the Lakers with eight goals and 19 points. Sophomore dynamo Monica Munoz proved to be a key offensive cog as well, netting six goals and accounting for 15 points. Junior Chelsea Olson directed play in the midfield and continued to show leadership for a young squad. Despite losing all-time leading scorer Jamie Beniac (26 goals) to graduation, Roosevelt returns a large contingent of its scoring along with goalkeepers Kara Jones and Maria Narcisi, the latter having earned the first CCAC Defensive Player of the Week honors in program history due to her wall-like presence between the posts.   

Volleyball

Brooke Lee playing volleyball

Brooke Lee

There is no doubt that one of the best volleyball players in the CCAC is Roosevelt’s Brooke Lee. The rising soon-to-be senior out of Dodgeville, Wisconsin is a 6-foot-1-inch leaping force who averaged 3.45 kills per set last year, ranking second in the conference and accumulating 455 kills to rate among the nation’s top 30 offensive producers. Lee, who also plays on the softball team, became the first repeat All-CCAC First Team selection since Vanessa Owusu earned the nod three consecutive years from 2012-14. Along with Lee and Maddy Cysewski, a junior transfer from McHenry County College who garnered All-CCAC Second Team recognition for her first year in green and white, team captain Abby Petroelje will have plenty of talent to guide as the Lakers seek a return to postseason play.

Cross Country/Track & Field

Gina Narcisi running

Gina Narcisi

Alena Pacheco nearly became the first Roosevelt runner to return to the NAIA National Cross Country Championships. While the greatest female distance runner in Roosevelt’s young team history is off to pursue a teaching career now that her athletic eligibility has ended, Pacheco’s young teammates are carrying the torch that she lit and exhausting themselves in a variety of distance and sprint events.

Wuraola Sosina racing on track

Wuraola Sosina

Gina Narcisi is attempting to become the first Roosevelt student-athlete to qualify for the NAIA marathon, while Wuraola Sosina continues to be one of the fastest runners in the CCAC, posting winning finishes throughout the indoor track season. On the men’s side, veterans Troy Harness (distance) and Dan Lim (hurdles) wrapped their solid careers while rookies Kwesi Ayekumi and Edwin Renteria gained valuable experience during outdoor and indoor running endeavors.    

Tennis

Another new face on the coaching staff for the Lakers was Greg Couch, best known for his journalistic work with the Chicago Sun-Times, FOX and Bleacher Report. His passion for the game of tennis is as mighty as his pen, and his experience covering the game at its highest levels — in the press box and his time instructing at local clubs — give Couch a unique edge in working with the Lakers on the court. Twins Michelle and Claudia Beczarski and men’s standout Serj Kiyasov conclude their college careers with hopes of leaving a strong foundation for next season.

Golf

Jake Myers became the first Roosevelt player to finish as the runner-up at the CCAC Championships last year in what was the culmination of a splendid rookie campaign, and this season the second-year standout is poised to lead the deepest group of golfers that Head Coach Peter Pougnet has fielded in his tenure. Veterans Matthew Spahr and Charlton Zimmerman, and newcomers Matthew Heesemann and JT Polinski, join Myers in a potent quintet that has the potential for a record team finish this year and beyond.

Baseball

Colten Trager swinging baseball bat

Colten Trager

The Roosevelt baseball team was on the cusp of its first CCAC tournament bid last year, and the Lakers are looking to break through the door and compete in postseason play for the first time in Head Coach Steve Marchi’s seven years as skipper. All-CCAC First Team slugger Colten Trager continued his rampage against baseballs at the start of the spring, and fellow catcher/infielder Tyler Ward was off to a scorching-hot start at the dish along with junior college transfer Jonah Meidl-Zahorodny. With a pitching staff headlined by ace Matt Dunne and a stout defense led by the likes of shortstop Logan Fleener, second baseman Matt Kozlak and Gold Glove outfielder Andrew Bohlmann, Marchi’s RU 9 aim to extend 2017 for as long
as possible.   

Softball

Haley Huss playing softball

Haley Huss

A new era began this spring as Roosevelt brought in Aaron Moore, previously the general manager of the two-time defending National Pro Fastpitch champion Chicago Bandits, as the new head softball coach. Moore is a respected mind in the sport, and the architect of successful pro teams on the diamond has shown an equally adept acumen for coaching on the collegiate level in a short amount of time.

Bethany Hart swinging baseball bat

Bethany Hart

Moore had the Lakers off to a school-best start, as second-year shortstop Haley Huss and senior outfielder Bethany Hart captained a young team with nine freshmen on the roster. One of those rookies, Taylor Sterkowitz, displayed a powerful bat with exceptional defense at first, while Moore’s pitching staff features a rookie core of local talents Brinn Arwood (Wheaton-Warrenville South), Maddy Janssen (Plainfield Central), Caitlyn Santiago (Oak Park and River Forest) and Brianna McCormick (Fenwick).

Men’s Basketball

Jake Ludwig playing basketball

Jake Ludwig

After becoming the CCAC Freshman of the Year in 2015-16, Jake Ludwig demonstrated his immunity to a sophomore slump. The 6-foot-1-inch guard out of St. Charles, Illinois led the Lakers in scoring for the second consecutive season by pouring in 15 points per game. His team-high of 113 assists ranked fourth in the conference, cementing his status as Roosevelt’s go-to guy and an honorable mention All-CCAC selection. Don’t mistake his ability for being above the fray when it comes to doing the little things that win games. “He is one of the toughest guys on the team, always mixing it up, diving on the floor, and taking charges,” Head Coach Joe Griffin said. “It’s not often you find the high scorer on a team as being one of the grittiest, and that’s what makes him special.” Ludwig returns with senior big men Joshua Dillingham and Adam Alexander, and a cast of contributors hungry to take Griffin’s squad to the next level.    

Women’s Basketball

Paige Gallimore playing basketball

Paige Gallimore

There is no doubt that guard Paige Gallimore is the engine that makes head coach Keisha Newell’s Roosevelt women’s basketball team go. The three-year starter out of Antioch, Illinois is a 5-foot-7-inch bundle of on-court fury who can drive at will. In a game often dominated by giants, Newell says that Gallimore “is so versatile on the offensive end because she is stronger than most guards and quicker than most post players.” The versatile backcourt star, who was named an Honorable Mention All-CCAC player for the first time, stuffed the stat sheet during her junior campaign this past season by leading the Lakers with 18 points per game, ranking fourth in the CCAC and 18th in the country. Gallimore didn’t just stop at scoring the rock; she was equally adept at corralling misses off the glass by averaging eight rebounds per contest, ranking sixth in the conference despite being the shortest player among the CCAC’s top 10 rebounders. In 10 of Roosevelt’s games this season, including a stretch of five consecutive games, Gallimore reached double figures in both points and rebounds for double-double performances, a feat made even tougher when every opposing team knew who the primary weapon was for the Lakers.


Away From Competition

Amid all of the athletic success achieved by the Lakers, their classroom accolades continued to impress. The fall 2016 Athletic Department grade point average was 3.1, the best in program history, and Roosevelt is already on pace to surpass its previous best for Daktronics-NAIA Scholar-Athletes in a single year. In addition to excelling academically, Roosevelt’s student-athletes continued to prioritize community service, volunteering at a bevy of area non-profits and events.

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Athletics, Fall 2016, Feature 4, Feature Stories

A Family Affair: The Lakers Sibling Rivalry

Maria Narcisi

Maria Narcisi

While some families get to see their Laker student-athlete excel in different sports, other families have more than one student-athlete donning the Green and White. In fact, there are five sets of siblings currently competing for Laker teams, either on the same squad or in different sports.

Senior swingman Damian Zalewski of the men’s basketball team gave his family a preview of what life was like to be a Roosevelt student-athlete. When it came time for Damian’s younger sister, Emily, to choose a university and pursue a collegiate tennis career, her decision was much more informed thanks to her older brother’s first-hand experience on campus.

Damian Zalewski

Damian Zalewski

“I encouraged my sister to make her own decision on where she wanted to receive her education, but I told my family and Emily that Roosevelt is a great college and I have enjoyed my time here,” Damian recalled. “I think it made her lean toward Roosevelt a little bit more.”

Senior Andrea Munoz actually started out at Calumet College of St. Joseph and played on the Crimson Wave women’s soccer team. When it came time for her younger sister, Monica, to make a college choice, Andrea also made the decision to join her sister at Roosevelt and reunite a soccer tandem that has played together since Monica was four.

Andrea and Monica Munoz

Andrea and Monica Munoz

“It was more like we made the decision together to attend school and play soccer here,” Monica, now a sophomore, said of their choice to play at Roosevelt. “She would transfer in as a junior and I would be an incoming freshman. It was like we were starting a new chapter together.”

Matt Marrera first became knowledgeable about Roosevelt as a sophomore in high school, when his older brother, Mike, was taking his official campus visit to Roosevelt during his senior year at Hinsdale South. Matt said he “instantly fell in love with the campus.” After Mike joined the Roosevelt baseball team and became one of the Lakers’ top pitchers, it was an easy decision for Matt to continue his baseball career at Roosevelt.

“Aside from the campus, and being able to live in such a beautiful city, the biggest and most special reason I came here to study and play ball was to step on the same baseball field at a collegiate level with my older brother Mike,” said Matt Marrera, now a sophomore infielder on coach Steve Marchi’s baseball team. “My older brother is not only a great pitcher, but he’s also my mentor, my inspiration and my best friend.”

Gina Narcisi

Gina Narcisi

The Narcisi sisters, both now juniors, have excelled for Roosevelt in different athletic settings. Gina Narcisi is consistently one of head coach Aaron King’s top two cross country runners and a distance standout during track season, while her twin sister, Maria, has overcome injury to emerge as starting goalkeeper for women’s soccer coach Roland Hahn. Maria even became the program’s first-ever CCAC Player of the Week, thanks to her stonewall play between the posts.

“My sister wasn’t originally attending Roosevelt, but she made a last-minute switch and I’m glad she did because we’ve only gotten closer,” Gina Narcisi said. “Teammates become family, but it’s always nice to have someone around who actually is.”

Gina’s cross country and track teammates, Jessica and Jackie Fuller, not only have each other to lean on, but their father, Jeff, who is Roosevelt’s carpenter foreman.

Jessica and Jackie Fuller

Many of the sibling duos say that competing for the same school, whether on the same team or not, has brought them closer together. “Ever since my sister and I were little, we would always talk about how we dreamed of going to college together to play soccer on the same team,” Monica Munoz said. “Now I’m playing college ball with my big sister. It’s nice to know it worked out the way it did.”

“I was always used to being on the field, course, or track with my twin, and I miss calling her a teammate,” Gina Narcisi said. “Since we play different sports, now we’ve learned to be each other’s biggest fans.”

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