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Lions Wilkins Named
NSCAA Division I Head Coach of the Year
Award follows Penn States second College Cup appearance
in her five-year tenure
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After leading the No. 2 Lions to a 23-0-2 record and
a national semifinal appearance this past season, women's
soccer coach Paula Wilkins has been named NSCAA Division
I National Coach of the Year.
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UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.; January 20, 2006 Penn State
womens soccer coach Paula Wilkins was named the Division
I National Coach of the Year Friday night by the National
Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) at the organizations
convention being held in Philadelphia, Pa., this weekend.
The award, the first for Wilkins, comes on the heels of an
historic 23-0-2 campaign by her squad and a final ranking
of No. 2. The Harrisburg-area native has already taken the
squad to two College Cup semifinals and captured the Big Ten
Championship in each year of her young career.
It is extremely humbling to be named National Coach
of the Year by your peers. A great deal of this honor belongs
to my coaching staff and my team. It was because of them that
we accomplished what we did this year, said Wilkins.
There were many other top coaches up for this award
as well, all equally deserving and I feel both lucky and thankful
to have been chosen. Im proud of my team, Im proud
of our season and Im proud of this program. I look forward
to continuing the success weve had at Penn State.
Four-time Big Ten Coach of the Year, Wilkins earned her first
NSCAA regional honor this year when she was named NSCAA Mid-Atlantic
Coach of the Year in December.
In just her fifth season as a head coach, Wilkins has accomplished
a tremendous amount already in her young career. A 1994 Massachusetts
grad, Wilkins began her coaching career as an assistant to
Pat Farmer when the Penn State program began that fall. In
2001, she assumed the head coaching position upon Farmer's
departure for the WUSA. Under Wilkins, Penn State has compiled
a 101-14-8 (.854) career record. This year, she grabbed her
100th career win vs. then- No. 9 Texas A&M to advance
the Lions to the NCAA quarterfinals for the fourth time in
the past five years.
In 2002, Wilkins became the first woman to both play and
coach in the College Cup after leading the Lions to the national
semifinals for the first of three times thus far in her career,
including two as a head coach (2002 and 2005). Wilkins' teams
have won five straight Big Ten regular season titles to add
to their previous three under Farmer equaling an unprecedented
eight-straight. Under Wilkins' tutelage, Penn State players
have either won or been the runner-up for the M.A.C. Hermann
Trophy each year of her five years. Her teams own an unbelievable
51-1 record at home, a .981 winning percentage, including
a 14-0 record at Jeffrey Field this year. Wilkins' record
as a Big Ten head coach stands at 47-3-2 (.923). Wilkins'
student-athletes have also achieved greatly off the field,
with 2003 M.A.C. Hermann Trophy runner-up Joanna Lohman collecting
her second-straight NSCAA Scholar-Athlete of the Year award
the same year, and two of her players earning academic All-America
honors this season.
This year, Wilkins helped guide the M.A.C. Hermann Trophy
runner-up as well as a semifinalist, three first team All-America
selections and seven all Mid-Atlantic Region picks. Five Nittany
Lions earned first team All-Big Ten honors this year, including
the Big Ten Offensive and co-Defensive Players of the Year.
Wilkins is the second coach in Penn State history to earn
the honor. Farmer was named the NSCAAs 1999 National
Coach of the Year.
No. 2 Penn State finished its historic season at 23-0-2 with
its highest final ranking ever. The Lions season ended
after a 0-0 draw with Portland ended with the Pilots continuing
to the eventual championship on penalty kicks. From sport-to-sport,
the Wilkins women's soccer now became one of the few
teams in NCAA history to finish with an undefeated record
without winning a national championship. The Lions final rank
marks the ninth consecutive year Penn State has finished in
the NSCAAs Top 10.
Keith FulkU.S.
Under-17 MNT Assistant Coach
Keith
Fulk joined the U.S. Under-17 Men's National Team coaching
staff in August of 2003 after the U.S. Soccer U-17 Residency
Program was increased to 40 players.
Fulk's first duty as part of the Under-17 MNT coaching staff
was as a scout during the 2003 FIFA Under-17 World Championship
in Finland. The U.S. won their first two games against South
Korea (6-1) and Sierra Leone (2-1) before falling to Spain
(2-0), but still advanced to the quarterfinals. The U.S. fell
to eventual champion Brazil (3-0) and finished in fifth place,
tying its second-best finish ever at the world championship.
Two years later, Fulk helped the U.S. keep their streak as
the only country to qualify for every FIFA U-17 World Championship
(11 total) when the team finished first in the CONCACAF Qualifying
Tournament in Costa Rica. During the 2005 FIFA U-17 World
Championship, the U.S. won their group and went undefeated
for just the third time in 11 attempts, advancing to the quarterfinals
and eventually finishing in 5th place for the second straight
time.
Before joining U.S. Soccer, Fulk, a native of Myerstown,
Pa., was the head coach at West Virginia University for one
season. With an assertive and get-tough mentality, Fulk was
able to instill a winning environment in a program that had
begun to spiral downward, but without the chance to recruit
players the Mountaineers struggled to a 4-11-2 record while
playing in the tough Big East.
Coming back to Florida to work for U.S. Soccer was an easy
choice for Fulk as his track record coaching in the state
is stellar. As the head coach at the University of Tampa for
six years, Fulk guided the Spartans to an 81-24-7 record,
three Sunshine State conference championships and three NCAA
Tournament Division II bids in 1996, 1997 and 2001. In 2001,
he led Tampa a 19-0-2 record, a No. 1 ranking during the season
(the school's highest ranking) and to the Division II National
Championship. In response to the team's accomplishments, Fulk
was named the National Soccer Coaches Association of America
(NSCAA) national coach of the year.
Fulk also served as the head assistant head coach at Tampa,
where he helped guide the team to the 1994 Division II National
Championship and two conference championships in 1994 and
1995.
As a player, Fulk was a Parade All-American at Elco High
School in Myerstown, Pa.. In college at the University of
Tampa, he was a four-time all-Sunshine State conference, all-south
regional and all-state performer, and helped the Spartans
to a national championship in 1981. He also earned a bachelor's
degree in health and physical education.
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