The award-winning newspaper of Anne Arundel Community College.

Campus Current

The award-winning newspaper of Anne Arundel Community College.

Campus Current

The award-winning newspaper of Anne Arundel Community College.

Campus Current

Ads
  • At Soapbox Sisters, one of the events for this year's Women's History Month, students will perform speeches and poems by women.
Club Ads
  • At Soapbox Sisters, one of the events for this year's Women's History Month, students will perform speeches and poems by women.
Recently on Instagram
Something is wrong.
Instagram token error.
1
Recently on Twitter

Mens, women’s soccer finish fall season

Midfielder+Jose+Rodriguez%2C+a+first-year+player%2C+takes+the+field+during+a+soccer+game.+The+team+finished+the+regular+season+3-6-4.
Courtesy of Frank Mitchell III
Midfielder Jose Rodriguez, a first-year player, takes the field during a soccer game. The team finished the regular season 3-6-4.

AACC’s soccer teams have finished their 2023 seasons.
Women’s soccer ended with an 8-5-3 record, losing to Community College of Baltimore County Essex by one goal in overtime during the NJCAA Region 20 Division II championship game.
Men’s soccer finished the regular season with a 3-6-4 record.
Women’s soccer head coach Jim Griffiths said although the end of the season was disappointing, “that’s soccer.”
“Very disappointing end of the season to lose in overtime the way we did, but that’s also soccer sometimes,” Griffiths said. “Sometimes you know, goofy things happen and you just got to take it.”
Second-year transfer studies student Megan Miller, who plays midfielder, said the team played hard but had to adapt to playing on grass rather than on turf and was not able to win the game.
“We battled hard, but I think at the end we just fell a little short and we just weren’t able to finish all the way through.”
Miller also gave credit to this season’s coaching staff.
“I would probably just emphasize on how the coaching staff was really just amazing this year,” Miller said. “I don’t know if a lot of people know coach Griff but he’s definitely a coach that everyone should know and all the coaches overall, they’re really great people who supported us no matter what.”
Griffiths said the season was positive although injuries affected the team.
“The injury bug was just constant throughout the beginning and the middle half, middle third of the season,” Griffiths said. “So we were never really fully healthy until the last couple weeks of the season.”
Men’s soccer did not qualify for the playoffs after making it to the national tournament for the past two years.
Men’s soccer head coach Nick Cosentino said the season was tough and that the team came up short of its goals.
“Well, it was a tough season record-wise, result-wise,” Cosentino said. “We had a solid team, we had a deep team and we were coming off two years in a row where we qualified for the national tournament.”
Cosentino said a lot of reasons resulted in the team’s performance, but “the onus is on us. I mean, we have every excuse in the book but if we finish our chances then it’s a completely different season.”

First-year marketing student Michael Capo, who plays goalie, said the team’s record does not reflect its ability.

“I think our record doesn’t show how good we actually were,” Capo said. “We lost a lot of really close games.”

Cosentinos said the future is bright for his young team.

“I know we should have a solid core of returners,” Cosentinos said. “We usually return four to six guys each year. I’m hopeful that we’ll return more than that this year because we could be really strong again next year.”

Capo agreed the team will be a threat next year.

“Watch out,” Capo said. “We’re going to come back next year. We know what we have to work on and we’re going to fix it. … Just watch out.”

Leave a Comment
More to Discover

Comments (0)

All Campus Current Picks Reader Picks Sort: Newest

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *