SIX WOMEN’S SOCCER SPARTANS TO REPRESENT CANADA AT FISU GAMES

WOMEN’S SOCCER
FRIDAY, MAY 20, 2011
TEAM CANADA

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SIX WOMEN’S SOCCER SPARTANS TO REPRESENT CANADA AT FISU GAMES

OTTAWA, Ontario –
The Trinity Western University women’s soccer team will be well-represented at this year’s FISU Games as six Spartans will play for Canada at the 26th Summer Universiade Aug. 12-23 in Shenzhen, China.

Spartans women’s soccer coach Graham Roxburgh will coach Canada’s FISU entry and, along with Canadian Interuniversity Sport, announced Friday the 20 student-athletes who will represent the red and white this summer.

From a Trinity Western team that has been crowned national champions in two of the last three years, it was goalie Kristen Funk, defenders Jilian Dietrich and Kristen Santema, midfielders Natalie Boyd and Melissa Mobilio and forward Nikki Wright who made the squad. Trinity Western coach Neil Turner will also join the national side as the goalie and video coach.

2011 Summer Universiade website: http://www.sz2011.org/Universiade
Team Canada website: http://english.cis-sic.ca/universiade/summer  

The all-CIS roster is dominated by the Canada West conference as no less than 14 Canada West standouts will make the trip to China.

Almost half the team, nine, returns from the last world university games in 2009 in Belgrade, Serbia, where Canada advanced out of pool play before finishing seventh out of 16 countries.

“I feel like we have a good, balanced team that is a good representation of the players we have in CIS,” says Trinity Western’s Graham Roxburgh, who was announced as Team Canada head coach last May. “We looked for players who could adapt to the next level because even though it is university students, it is a completely different level. Speed of play, the ability to play faster, the ability to be more athletic, to be more aggressive and physical and yet still have a soccer maturity that will allow them to play in a much more competitive environment.”
 
“We weren’t necessarily just looking for the best and most talented players but for the players we thought would be parts of a puzzle that would complete a picture,” adds Roxburgh, who was also at the helm of the 2009 Canadian squad.

Defending the Canadian net in Shenzhen will be Funk, from Calgary, and Rachel Badek, a St. Thomas, Ont., native who attends Carleton University.   

The backfield is comprised of Jilian Dietrich of Calgary and Santema of Coquitlam, B.C., UBC’s Jessica Briker of Kelowna, B.C., UQAM’s Justine Labrecque of Quebec City, Queen’s Brienna Shaw of Vancouver, as well as Alberta’s Keshia Wallin St. Albert, Alta.

The seven midfielders are Boyd of Surrey, B.C., and Mobilio of Coquitlam, Saskatchewan’s Daniela Fuenzalida of Saskatoon, Sherbrooke’s Andréanne Gagné of St-Hyacinthe, Que., Wilfrid Laurier’s Alyssa Lagonia of Kitchener, Ont., Alberta’s Carleigh Miller of St. Albert, and Victoria’s Jaclyn Sawicki of Coquitlam.

Up front, Victoria’s Kendra Flock of Calgary, UBC’s Janine Frazao of Port Moody, B.C., Montreal’s Véronique Laverdière of Montreal, Calgary’s Tessa Miller of Calgary and Wright of Cloverdale, B.C., are the strikers who hope to fill the opposition’s net.

Funk, Briker, Dietrich, Shaw, Wallin, Gagné, Flock, Laverdière and Wright are all veterans from the 2009 Games. Mobilio was also selected two years ago but missed the competition due to an injury.

Laverdière is the reigning CIS player of the year, while Shaw led Queen’s to the CIS national title last fall.

In Shenzhen, Canada will compete in the preliminary round in Pool A against tournament host China, reigning bronze medalist Great Britain, as well as Taiwan. A total of 12 countries are entered in the tourney.

The defending Universiade champion is South Korea, which defeated Japan in the 2009 gold-medal final.

“We’re up against it because I feel in our pool we have two of what I would consider some of the strongest teams in the tournament in China and Great Britain. I don’t know much about Taiwan but I know it will be an incredibly competitive group and we’re going to have to figure out a way to take points off of each team,” says Roxburgh, who led his team to a pair of wins over China in 2009 including a 2-1 victory in the preliminary round and a 1-0 shutout (5-4 in PK) in the seventh-place match.  

Women’s soccer made its Universiade debut as a demonstration sport at the 1993 Buffalo Games when the women’s soccer tournament was held in Hamilton. The sport became an official Universiade discipline in 2001 in Beijing, China.

Canada has finished fifth on two occasions, first in Buffalo when six teams competed in the tourney and then in Izmir, Turkey, in 2005, when 12 countries participated in the event.

Rounding out the team’s support staff for the 2011 Games are team leader Jorge Sanchez from Concordia University, assistant coach Eva Havaris from Toronto, goalie coach and video analyst Neil Turner from Trinity Western and athletic therapist Neena Gupta.

Sanchez served in the same role in Serbia.

The team will hold a final training camp including three exhibition games in Vancouver from July 30 to August 5 before departing for China.

TEAM CANADA ROSTER   
            
Position           Name                          University                   Hometown      

Goalkeeper      Rachel Badek              Carleton                       St. Thomas, Ont.
Goalkeeper        Kristen Funk                   Trinity Western                     Calgary, Alta.
Defender         Jessica Briker               UBC                            Kelowna, B.C.
Defender           Jilian Dietrich                 Trinity Western                   Calgary, Alta.
Defender         Justine Labrecque        UQAM                         Quebec City, Que.
Defender           Kristen Santema           Trinity Western                 Coquitlam, B.C.
Defender         Brienna Shaw              Queen’s                       Vancouver, B.C.                      
Defender         Keshia Wallin              Alberta                         St. Albert, Alta.
Midfield                Natalie Boyd                Trinity Western                 Surrey, B.C.
Midfield           Daniela Fuenzalida      Saskatchewan              Saskatoon, Sask.
Midfield           Andréanne Gagné        Sherbrooke                  St-Hyacinthe, Que.
Midfield           Alyssa Lagonia            Wilfrid Laurier             Kitchener, Ont.
Midfield           Carleigh Miller             Alberta                         St. Albert, Alta.
Midfield               Melissa Mobilio           Trinity Western                  Coquitlam, B.C.
Midfield           Jaclyn Sawicki             Victoria                        Coquitlam, B.C.
Striker              Kendra Flock               Victoria                        Calgary, Alta.
Striker              Janine Frazao               UBC                            Port Moody, B.C.
Striker              Véronique Laverdière  Montreal                      Montreal, Que.
Striker              Tessa Miller                 Calgary                        Calgary, Alta.
Striker                 Nikki Wright                Trinity Western                  Cloverdale, B.C.

STAFF                                                                                                

Position                       Name                          University                   

Head coach                      Graham Roxburgh       Trinity Western                        
Assistant coach            Eva Havaris                 Toronto                                    
Goalie coach / video         Neil Turner                  Trinity Western
Team leader                 Jorge Sanchez              Concordia                    
Athletic therapist          Neena Gupta                Toronto/McGill

UNIVERSIADE POOLS:
 
The Universiade women’s soccer tournament will run from August 11-21. The detailed schedule will be announced at a later date.
 
Pool A: China, Great Britain, CANADA, Taiwan
Pool B: South Korea, Russia, Mexico, South Africa
Pool C: Japan, France, Brazil, Estonia

CANADA’S RESULTS IN WOMEN’S SOCCER AT THE UNIVERSIADE:
 
2009 (Belgrade, Serbia): 7th / 16 teams
2007 (Bangkok, Thailand): 10th / 16
2005 (Izmir, Turkey): 5th / 12
2003 (Daegu, South Korea): 10th / 11
2001 (Beijing, China): 11th / 12
1993 (Buffalo, USA): 5th / 6

About the Summer Universiade

The Summer Universiade is an international multi-sport event that takes place every two years and is second only to the Olympic Games in the number of participating athletes and countries. The Universiade is open to competitors who are at least 17 and less than 28 years of age as of January 1 in the year of the Games. Participants must be full-time students at a post-secondary institution (university, college, CEGEP) or have graduated from a post-secondary institution in the year preceding the event.

About Canadian Interuniversity Sport

Canadian Interuniversity Sport is the national governing body of university sport in Canada. Fifty-two universities, 10,000 student-athletes and 550 coaches vie for 21 national championships in 12 different sports. CIS also provides high performance international opportunities for Canadian student-athletes at Winter and Summer Universiades, as well as numerous world university championships. For further information, visit www.cis-sic.ca.

-CIS-

For more information:

Michel Bélanger        
Manager, Communications & Media Relations
Canadian Interuniversity Sport
Off: (613) 562-5670 ext. 25
Cell: (613) 447-6334
belanger@universitysport.ca
www.cis-sic.ca

Last Updated: 2011-05-20
Author: Mark Janzen