Box Score KEENE, N.H. 11/5/09 - The Keene State women's soccer team is
headed back to the Little East Tournament championship game.
The top-seeded Owls punched their ticket to finals with a 2-0
shutout victory over fourth seed Western Conn. State University in
a semifinal game played Thursday night at Owl Athletic Complex.
Senior Kendra Spencer (Petoskey, Mich.) and
junior Katie Bradford (Lebanon, N.H.) each scored
goals and sophomore goalie Megan Dempsey (East
Weymouth, Mass.) made four saves for her fifth shutout of the
season to lead the Owls into the finals.
Keene State (14-5-2), which will be making its eighth trip to
the finals and its first appearance since 2006, will host second
seed Eastern Conn. in the championship game on Saturday at
noon. The Warriors blanked third seed UMass-Boston 4-0 in the
second semifinal game to advance to the finals.
"It's a long time coming," said KSC Coach Denise
Lyons. "The team worked really hard. I told
them they had to come fired up from the start and we jumped on them
and got a quick goal."
Facing the Colonials for the eighth time in LEC tournament play,
the Owls didn't waste anytime getting on the board, scoring on
their first shot on net at the 1:15 mark. Spencer sent a shot
toward the net that Colonial sophomore goalie Molly Miller
(Middlebury, Conn.) mishandled. The ball was redirected by Miller
into the net.
"It was a strange goal," said Spencer, who has five goals on the
season. "I didn't think it was going in, so when it did I was
surprised."
Western Conn. had an opportunity to get the equalizer seven
minutes into the second half. Senior Angela Wozniak (Ludlow,
Mass.) unleashed a drive that Dempsey was able to jump and tip over
the crossbar.
The Colonials, which concludes its season with 10-10-1 record,
maintained their pressure in the Owls side of the field. Following
a throw-in, senior Nicole Sieber (Newtown, Conn.) had a shot that
was stopped by Dempsey at the corner of the net.
The Owls dodged a bullet at the 23:04 mark when junior Lauren
Matthews (Monroe, Conn.) pounced on a deflected ball. She walked in
alone, but her drive went just wide of the far post.
Later in the half, Bradford went down the left side looking to
give KSC a two goal lead, but her low hard drive was handled
Miller, who finished the game with four saves. Bradford wouldn't be
denied the next time down the field. Taking a feed from
senior Molly Brunelle (Walpole, N.H.), Bradford
went around a prone Miller and put the ball into the open net for a
key insurance goal with just over five minutes to play. It
was Bradford's team-leading 14th goal of the season and 44th of her
career moving the junior into third place in KSC all-time goal
list.
"It was a great goal, "said Lyons. "That's why she is one
of the top forwards in the conference."
An aggressive Dempsey, who came off her line to cover up several
loose ball in the box, and a solid KSC defense kept the Colonials
of the board the rest of the way. "Sometimes we get caught and I
have to come out and make the save to help out the team," said the
Owls' sophomore keeper.
"She's so solid," said Lyons. "There's a sense of comfort
when you have a goalkeeper back there who going to make that
save. She's going to make the big one and she's going to make
the routine one."
KSC had a slim advantage in shots (12-9) and corners
(4-3).
Keene State, which edged ECSU 2-1 in overtime back on Sept. 26,
and the Warriors are no strangers in tournament play. The two
teams met in three consecutive finals 2003-05. In a scoreless
2003 final, ECSU was award the title on penalty kicks. The
Owls came back to win (3-0) in 2004 while the Warriors took the
2005 crown (2-0).