Athletics, Fall 2015, Feature 3, Uncategorized

Nothing Soft About These Lakers

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One of the most accomplished athletic resumes in the land belongs to Roosevelt head softball coach Amanda Scott. As a collegian at Fresno State University, Scott was a four-time All-American and led the Bulldogs to the 1998 NCAA title. In addition to winning the Women’s College World Series MVP that year, she was later named to the NCAA Division I Softball 25th Anniversary Team, one of a bevy of awards achieved during her time as a superior student-athlete.

To no one’s surprise, Scott also enjoyed a successful international and professional playing career. She won a National Pro Fastpitch title and World Series MVP award in 2004, and she represented the United States in various international tournaments, serving as an alternate on the U.S. squad that won gold at the 2000 Summer Olympics.

After her playing career concluded, Scott pursued a career in coaching. In addition to her role as a player/coach for the New York/New Jersey Juggernaut, a professional team, she was at NCAA Division I schools Michigan State, Iowa and the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Roosevelt Softball vs. TCC

Scott’s ambitious drive to conquer challenges at every turn eventually led her to her current position at Roosevelt, where she had one of the grandest tests a first-time head coach could face: starting a team completely from scratch.

“I remember initially just hoping to be able to recruit an entire team,” Scott, a California native who has called Chicago home for the last eight years, recalled of her first days on the job at Roosevelt in the fall of 2011. “Once that challenge was met, I looked to simply create an environment where each student-athlete could grow and thrive.”

Before she could create that culture, Scott had to find student-athletes who were willing to take a leap and attend Roosevelt, a University that never had a softball program prior to their arrival.

That chance to be a part of startup in softball under the tutelage of an all-time great exhilarated Morgan Vogt, now a senior standout as the Lakers’ ace pitcher and one of the team’s top hitters.

“I was so excited to be in a new program and set goals and standards for the next teams to come,” said Vogt, a Plainfield native who is a three-time All-Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference pick and all-region honoree. “I love playing for Amanda. She’s the main reason I chose this program. She treats us as equals and never talks down to us. She inspires us and makes us want to be better.”

“I looked to simply create an environment where each student-athlete could grow and thrive.”
Coach Amanda Scott

With almost every distinction imaginable in the sport to her credit, one might assume that Scott is all softball, all the time. Not so, as the culture she has espoused revolves around competitiveness on the diamond balanced with responsibility to academics and being good, productive people who can communicate and take pride in their work, no matter the realm.

“My main goal in coming to Roosevelt was to really grow more as a person and a player,” said Amanda Ferguson, a senior second baseman from Colorado whose All-CCAC hitting was eclipsed only by classroom success that led to her being named Roosevelt’s first-ever Academic All-American. “Amanda teaches us how to be the best softball players and human beings we can be.”

Scott said she emphasizes academics first and foremost, with additional focus on the overall concept of team and supporting each other not just on the field but throughout the student-athletes’ lives.

“College is an important time where you are constantly evolving as humans,” said Scott. “We work to connect with all student-athletes to make sure they are getting the support they need individually, whether that be socially, academically or athletically.”

“The thing I like about Amanda’s approach is she connects the game to our own personal life,” said Kristy Santora, a senior from Wheaton who has adapted from playing the outfield to catching behind the plate and has garnered all-region honors for her proficient offensive tear last spring. “The things I have learned from her about the game are things I can carry over into my everyday life.”

Senior Morgan Vogt is Roosevelt's top pitcher and one of the Lakers' most dangerous hitters.

Senior Morgan Vogt is Roosevelt’s top pitcher and one of the Lakers’ most dangerous hitters.

Connecting lessons of softball to life’s trials and tribulations is important, as most athletes on the NAIA level will not pursue the post-collegiate playing opportunities earned by Scott. If the Lakers’ on-field performance is any indication of future life approaches, this group will be a hit.

That’s because Roosevelt has been one of the top offensive teams in the CCAC since the program’s debut. While some would call their 2013 season beginner’s luck, the Lakers’ prowess at the plate has continued the last two years to frighten opposing pitchers.

“I talk to our hitters from a pitching perspective,” said Scott, a nearly-unhittable hurler during her playing career. “I see the swing and evaluate how I would get them out as a pitcher and then go from there. We keep things simple and we don’t try to change swings. At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what it looks like or feels like so long as you get it done.”

The 2016 season will be the swan song for Scott’s first recruiting class, and the Lakers want to send their 11 seniors out on a high note with a first-ever CCAC tournament berth.

“We have a clear understanding of what it is we need to do to win and be successful,” said Katie Neubauer, a Batavia-bred senior pitcher, infielder and potent weapon at the plate. “For many of us, this is our last season we have to play the sport we love, so I hope we can continue to compete and carry out the season as long as possible.”

It may be the last go-around for this crop of Lakers, but the lessons they have culled from one of the game’s best will help them go after all of life’s challenges like a fastball that caught too much of home plate.


2015-16 Seasons in Full Swing

Swinging is a specialty of sophomore Matthew Spahr of the men’s golf team and freshman Emily Zalewski of the women’s tennis team. All of Roosevelt’s athletic squads will be swinging for the fences and aiming for success in the Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference.

Sophomore attacker Brooke Lee has stepped up for the Roosevelt volleyball team’s offense. Senior guard Becky Williford is the on-court catalyst for Roosevelt women’s basketball with new head coach Keisha Newell calling the shots from the sideline.

The Lakers’ cross country and track and field program is taking big strides forward under new coach and Roosevelt alum Aaron King, while the Roosevelt men’s soccer team notched early road wins over top-25 foes this fall thanks in large part to the wizardry of All-CCAC midfielder Jose Garcia.

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Athletics, Feature 4, Feature Stories, Spring 2015

A Giant Step Forward

Almost everyone from Roosevelt’s record-setting 2014 soccer season will be back this fall.

Almost everyone from Roosevelt’s record-setting 2014 soccer season will be back this fall.

Last year was a World Cup year, but the Roosevelt University community didn’t need to see games played 5,000 miles away to get excited about soccer. That’s because 2014 was also the year that the Roosevelt men’s soccer team established itself as a program to be reckoned with.

“The success attained this season is a credit to the entire team,” said Head Coach Graham Brennan, a former standout at Loyola University Chicago who revived Roosevelt’s soccer program in 2012. “The reward of winning 13 games has helped the group gain confidence and will hopefully push us forward to more success in the future.”

What made the Lakers successful, and simultaneously fun to watch, was their unrelenting offensive attack. Whereas soccer is often criticized for its low-scoring affairs, Roosevelt tallied nearly four goals a game, an almost unheard of average that ranked second to only national runner-up Texas at Brownsville in the NAIA statistical rankings.

Those high-scoring fireworks were propelled by a pair of highly-touted newcomers, Evan Trychta and Jose Garcia, who lived up to the hype.

Trychta, Illinois’ best high school soccer player as a senior at Naperville North in 2011, began his collegiate career with limited playing time at the University of Illinois at Chicago, a Division I program. But his career was rejuvenated by transferring to Roosevelt. The quick, powerful frontman scored a school-record 17 goals to go along with 12 assists for 46 points in 2014, making him one of the top 10 point producers in the NAIA.

The other star Brennan recruited was Garcia, the Chicago Sun-Times’ player of the year in 2013. Garcia led Wheeling High School to the Class 3A state title game as a senior. In Garcia’s first season at Roosevelt, he scored 15 goals and an all-time team best 15 assists, coming up just one point short of Trychta’s offensive total.

First-year offensive stars Jose Garcia (left) and Evan Trychta (right) combined to score 32 goals and assist on 27 others for the Lakers last season.

Their on-field success earned Trychta All-Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference (CCAC) First Team honors and Garcia the conference’s Freshman of the Year award.

While the offense garnered all the attention, the defense wasn’t too shabby either. Behind Curie High School product and two-time All-CCAC Second Team defensive captain Luis Ortiz and junior goalkeeper Jake Cigelnik from Mundelein, the Lakers allowed just 24 goals in 19 matches and recorded a school-record eight shutouts, a mark of goal-less play that ranked 25th in the NAIA.

“As a team, we demand that everyone works hard defensively,” Brennan said of his team’s philosophy without the ball. “We also changed some team tactics early in the season that allowed us to trap teams that were trying to possess the ball and catch them on the counter attack. Once we got comfortable with this style of play, the team really bought in and we were able to go on a long winning streak.”

After starting the year with two close defeats, the Lakers rattled off 11 consecutive victories that propelled them to first place in the CCAC. Near the end of that streak, junior co-captain Leo Rodriguez, who tallied 12 goals in the Lakers’ first 12 games, suffered a knee injury that sidelined him for the rest of the regular season. The winning streak was snapped shortly after Rodriguez’s injury in a late double-overtime loss to Purdue Calumet, but the Lakers remained in good shape heading into the CCAC Tournament with Rodriguez rehabbing to play in the postseason.

The postseason is where the Lakers encountered Purdue Calumet once again, and the two teams engaged in a spirited first-round playoff game at UIC’s Flames Field in front of an enthusiastic crowd that braved the November chill. Roosevelt rallied from two goals down early thanks to strikes by Garcia and fellow freshman Marino Lopez, and the match turned into a stalemate that lasted 110 minutes.

The game finally ended with penalty kicks. Unfortunately for the Lakers, the usually reliable Garcia missed his kick and the Peregrines outlasted the Lakers 4-3 to end Roosevelt’s best season to date.

Brennan will have most of his roster back for the program’s fourth season since its revival in 2012, a year in which the Lakers won just two of 18 matches and scored five fewer goals than Trychta tallied on his own.

“Our goal,” said Brennan, “is to win the CCAC championship in 2015 and, hopefully, give these players memories and a bond that will last a lifetime.” 2015 is not a World Cup year, but it is a year that has Roosevelt University even more excited about soccer.

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