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Thursday, May 09, 2024
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Washington Girls Soccer

Washington - Girls Soccer

No. 9 Warriors blanked by No. 5 IC West

IOWA CITY -- Washington surrendered three goals and the ninth-ranked Warriors were dumped by No. 5 Iowa West, 3-0, Tuesday in girls soccer.

Iowa City West 3, Washington 0

Goals: ICW -- Mary Hausler, Anna Hausler, Leah Murray. Assists: ICW -- Rachel Hegeman, Alli Peterson, Eleni Katz.

 

Washington - Girls Soccer

No. 9 Warriors rout Waterloo East

WATERLOO --No. 9 Washington peppered the Waterloo East goal Thursday and the Warriors whipped the Trojans, 8-0, in a girls soccer game at Sloan Wallace Stadium.

Maddi Hines scored two goals, one on a penalty kick, and six other Warriors hit the back of the net. Katie Hammond had two assists.

Washington (1-0, 1-0) took 21 shots and 13 were on goal. East took two shots.


Washington 8, Waterloo East 0

Goals: CRW -- Maddi Hines 2, Lydia Kratovil, Makenzie Wallace, Tori Carson, Anne Cooper, CJ Cooper, Naomi Spence. Assists: CRW -- Katie Hammond 2, T.Carson, Kratovil, Hines, Olivia Altemeier, CJ Cooper.

 

Washington - Girls Soccer

Warriors hire Hollmer as girls soccer coach

Chad Hollmer has been named the new girls soccer coach at Cedar Rapids Washington High School.

Hollmer replaces Sean McCoy, who left Washington last year to work for a soccer club program in Omaha.

Hollmer played soccer at Mount Mercy University and was a two-year captain. He has been an assistant coach at St. Ambrose University the past three years and previously was an assistant coach at Mount Mercy and Cedar Rapids Jefferson.

Hollmer received the NAIA Champion of Character Award at Mount Mercy.

   

Washington - Girls Soccer

Maddi Hines will play soccer in St. Louis

Cedar Rapids Washington senior Maddi Hines will be joining the women's soccer program at Missouri-St. Louis next year.

She plans to sign her letter-of-intent with the Tritons at 3 p.m. Wednesday during a ceremony in the Washington cafeteria.

Hines led Washington with 10 goals and four assists last season as a junior and helped the Warriors (16-4) reach the quarterfinals of the Class 3A state tournament. She received honorable mention on the Mississippi Valley Conference honor squad and was second team all-Metro.

Missouri-St. Louis, an NCAA Division II school, finished with a 9-9 record for Coach Bobby Lessentine last season.

 

Washington - Girls Soccer

Gritty Warriors fall in shootout to No. 1 Ankeny

MUSCATINE -- As the last of the penalty kicks sailed into the net, Washington goalkeeper Sophie Malcom stayed stretched out on the ground where she landed, but the entire Washington team, in a show of solidarity, ran into the goal and picked her up.

“It’s hard to be the goalkeeper in those,” Coach Sean McCoy said. “Ankeny has five great shooters and they hit four great PKs. Sophie did her best. That kind of embodies us. It is not about individuals, it is about the group, and our group went over there to make sure she knows she played a heck of a game.”

The eighth-ranked Warriors (16-4) lost a heartbreaker against top-ranked Ankeny (19-1) on Thursday in the first round of the state tournament at the Muscatine Soccer Complex. The game was tied after regulation and two overtimes, so went to a penalty kick shootout. Ankeny made its four kicks, Washington converted two of four.

It was the Warriors first trip to the state tournament and the team collectively held their heads high after the tough loss.

“I’m really happy with the way they are handling this,” McCoy said. “It is really disappointing to work this hard and not come out on the positive side of the result, but you’ve got to put things into perspective. This is a team that has never gone to state, a team that has never gotten this many wins, a team that has never allowed so few goals. We overachieved all year and this is another example of that.”

The Warriors fought hard and played toe to toe through the entire 100 minutes of regulation and overtime with the Hawks, who outscored their opponents 93-5 during the regular season. The game was a rough battle in the midfield and every time either team would get close to the other's goal, the defense came up big and turned them away.

“It starts from the forwards on down, that is part of the good thing. It is team defending, it’s not just 1 (versus) 1,” McCoy said of the Warriors' defense.

After the game, McCoy told his players that he would not be returning as Washington’s coach next season. He is planning on moving to Omaha for a job. But he said he couldn’t be prouder of what his team accomplished this year.

“When they are plugged in and when they buy into a system, they can do anything,” McCoy said of this year's squad. “We set five or six school records, we went to state when nobody has ever done that, and we took one of the best teams in the last couple years into a shootout. It feels like this team has overachieved and that is a special feeling.”

   
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