Rutgers women’s soccer legend Carli Lloyd joined the B1G Tailgate

On Saturday, two times FIFA Women’s World Cup Champion Carli Lloyd joined the B1G Tailgate before Rutgers football Week 7 game.

Two times FIFA Women’s World Cup Champion Carli Lloyd joined the B1G Tailgate before Rutgers football Week 7 game against Michigan State on Saturday.

During her interview, Lloyd described her interest in Rutgers and how the university was on her radar for schools to attend at a young age. While attending Rutgers, she was intrigued by trying to put Rutgers women’s soccer on the map.

The Delran, New Jersey, native had overwhelming success as a Scarlet Knight in 2001-04. She remains a strong focal point of the women’s soccer program. Lloyd is No. 1 all-time in the Rutgers career record books for points (117) and goals (50) and is second in game-winners (15) and shots (295). She was elected into the Rutgers Hall of Fame in 2018, holding the single-season records for points (37) and goals (15), and is second in game-winners (six) for the Big East Conference.

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Lloyd guided the Scarlet Knights to the Sweet Sixteen in the program’s second-ever NCAA Tournament bid in 2001. Since 2001, Rutgers women’s soccer has gained national exposure as a contender, competing in multiple NCAA Tournaments.

 

Allison Lowrey is leading Rutgers offense

Allison Lowery is being counted on this season by Rutgers women’s soccer.

Entering the 2023 campaign, Allison Lowrey had high expectations. The New Jersey native set career highs in goals last season with seven and points with 18. As Lowrey saw an increase in playing time, she provided a spark to the Rutgers offense. That has carried over into her senior campaign, as she has been a points machine over the last few weeks.

Through six games, Lowrey has recorded ten points and five goals. She has already added three multipoint games to her resume, including a dominating performance against FDU. On August 28, the talented forward recorded six points and scored three of Rutgers seven goals. It was the program’s first hat trick since 2019.

Additionally, Rutgers offense has run through Lowrey through the first month of the 2023 campaign. She currently leads the Scarlet Knights in goals, points, and shots on goal. Her success has proven that her play last year was not just lightning in a bottle. That has been a welcoming sign for a Rutgers team hoping to make a deep playoff run.

Lowrey will be a player to keep an eye on as the season continues. She is on pace to easily surpass her numbers from last year with no signs of slowing down. With Lowrey at her best, this Rutgers team is hard to stop.

Is a Rutgers athlete the next Olivia Dunne? Outkick thinks so

Riley Tiernan is poised to be the next Olivia Dunne.

Move over Olivia Dunne, Rutgers women’s soccer player Riley Tiernan is poised to be the next breakthrough college athlete of social media.

Now, Tiernan has a long way to go to get to the level of Dunne, a gymnast for LSU who is an absolute juggernaut on social media. But it is clear that Tiernan, a junior forward at Rutgers, is trending in the right direction.

On TikTok for instance, Tiernan is closing in on 125,000 followers. The variety of her Tiks (or are they Toks?) are pretty typical college stuff, from dancing with friends to downtime activities and the usual things that this generation does when bored.

She also has 37,000 followers on Instagram. On the social media platform, she clearly has taken a more polished approach to her posts as of late, several of which include name, image and likeness (NIL) posts (such as for Atlantic Physical Therapy Center in Manasquan, N.J.).

For comparison, the Rutgers men’s basketball program has 42,000 followers on Instagram, which is a strong number. What Tiernan has tapped into on social media is pretty crazy.

What this content means for Tiernan is the opportunity to cash in on her social media presence with financial opportunities.

As Outtkick notes, Tiernan recently signed an (NIL) deal with Adidas.

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But what really stood out from Outkick in all of this, is that the sports, news and lifestyle website believes Tiernan’s marketability on social media is ready to take off:

“Rutgers soccer star Riley Tiernan appears to be the latest challenger to Olivia Dunne for the 2023-24 season, and it’s shaping up to be a battle for the ages.

“Big Ten vs. SEC? I mean, it’s sort of what college athletics are barreling towards anyway after this season. Might as well start now!”

This of course is all made possible by her ability on the field. Last season as a sophomore, Tiernan was an All-Big Ten selection and made the watchlist for the MAC Hermann Trophy, given out to the best men’s and women’s players in college soccer.

She also was an All-Academic Big Ten selection, underscoring the work that she also gets done in the classroom.

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Barbie Day: Rutgers women’s soccer host FDU on Monday

Rutgers (1-1-1) will host Fairleigh Dickinson University (0-3) as they prepare for their third promotional event of the 2023 season.

On Monday, Rutgers women’s soccer (1-1-1) will host Fairleigh Dickinson University (0-3) as they prepare for their third promotional event of the 2023 season. For their third promotion of the 2023 season, Rutgers will hold Barbie Day for all fans attending their game on Monday.

Fans are encouraged to bring their favorite Barbie doll and cheer on the Rutgers women’s soccer team.

The Scarlet Knights are coming off a 1-1 draw last week after giving up an early lead to NC State (1-0-2) with just 2:25 left in the contest. The Scarlet Knights captured the disappointing draw after leading most of the game on the road. Still, it was not a bad result given that NC State was an NCAA Tournament team last year.

In the United Soccer Coaches Top 25 Poll, the Wolfpack received multiple votes this season and participated in the 2022 NCAA Tournament last year.  

Rutgers Allison Lowrey scored her No. 17 career goal against NC State, but her efforts weren’t enough to capture the Scarlet Knights’ victory. Rutgers led in shot attempts (13-11) and shots on goal (4-3), but the Scarlet Knights did not place a shot on target in the second half.

Rutgers return home with a 1-1 record at Yurack Field. The Scarlet Knights will look to pick up a victory as they prepare to face off against the 2022 NEC Tournament champions at 5 p.m. on Monday.

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After falling short of expectations, Rutgers women’s soccer is prepared to ‘sweep the shed’ in 2023

Rutgers women’s soccer is hoping to bring a new mentality back to their old winning ways.

PISCATAWAY, N.J. — Rutgers football has ‘CHOP.,’ a mantra that the program carries that personifies their mentality of hard work and attention to detail. Now, after an offseason of introspection and self-evaluation, Rutgers women’s soccer is prepared to ‘sweep the shed.’

For Rutgers women’s soccer, it is a new mentality to get back to their old ways of winning.

Last season ended early for Rutgers, losing in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. For a team that had made the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament in 2021, it was a disappointing end to the season.

Four straight losses, including in the Big Ten Tournament and then the NCAA Tournament, marked a season where Rutgers started off strong but lost direction in the second half of the season.

A 13-5-2 season is by no means an underwhelming season, but there is no doubt that this group felt like 2022 was marked by unrealized expectations.

“100 percent. So you look at it – we feel we have done a lot of really good things in our program over the years, and it’s how you judge success and failure,” head coach Mike O’Neill told Rutgers Wire last week.

“And so for us, we felt we could have gotten more out of last year. Toward the end of the year, we kind of got lost a bit. And that was the time that we should be playing our best soccer. And we didn’t do that. I know that they were very disappointed and I know the staff was disappointed. So we’ve taken that experience and that has been our motivation for the past seven months is that we weren’t happy with the way that it ended.”

This offseason, Rutgers didn’t go heavy into the transfer portal, instead making one addition in Gia Vicari. The former Georgetown forward, three times an All-Big East selection, will be asked to bring consistency at the forward position.

O’Neill raves about Vicari’s scoring ability and the way she has integrated into the team this offseason. But he mostly recognizes that Vicari’s work ethic and mentalty fits into this program.

For O’Neill and his team, getting back on track this season is as much about doing the right things off the field as it is on the practice pitch and gameday.

This offseason, the team read the book Legacy which is about the New Zealand rugby program. New Zealand is consistently the top rugby team in the world, despite being one of the smallest countires to play the sport. Hard work and team spirit are at the core of New Zealand’s ability to develop top-flite international rugby talent.

One of the concepts deeply embedded in the book is that of “sweep the shed.”

The idea is that no one is above any role, everyone must be willing to do the little things. The ‘shed’ is slang for the locker room and the New Zealand rugby team, one of the best (if not the best) in the world takes pride in cleaning up after themselves following practice and games.

It is a mentality of humility that has resonated with the soccer program as they look to bounce back from a disappointing 2022 season.

“To me, it’s the little things- it makes me think about when you’re at a hotel, you clean up your hotel room before you leave,” midfielder Sara Brocious said.

“There are people there to clean up after you but you clean up anyway. It’s just doing the right thing all the time  -picking up trash when you see it. Doesn’t have to be just cleaning up either. It’s just doing the right thing like doing your homework, for class, and taking care of whatever needs to be taken care of so that we can focus on what we need to focus on when we get here. Just being a good person.”

This Rutgers team has the potential to be very good. There is balance on the roster, with some strong veteran pieces along with some promising young talent that is ready to break through and play significant minutes.

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O’Neill knows how to balance and build a team, not unlike his predecessor, Glenn Crooks.

He smiles when asked about this team, leaning into his black leather chair inside his office. He doesn’t talk about their skillset or their stats.

Instead, he peppers the conversation with the term “good people” when he describes the players on his program.

“The thing that is so important for us, is there has to be meaning in everything that we do. It’s just not soccer. It’s just not the education. It’s everything – it’s the education, it’s the soccer, it’s the people,” O’Neill said.

“It’s putting your heart on the table and asking everybody who’s involved in your program, just not the coach, just not the players, the trainers, the strength conditioning, our operations, Matt [Choquette of athletic communications] – everybody that takes care of it. So there’s got to be…you really want to be invested in what you’re doing. So we have these core values that are really important. Those core values are for life. That’s what they are – they’re for life.

“That’s what we’re here to do. You know, we have the soccer part of it but we’re supposed to prepare them. To get that piece of paper [and] they stand on their own two feet, they make their own way. Which is really important, but we prepare them for whatever they’re going to do when they leave here.”

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Can Carli Lloyd replace Vlatko Andonovski as USWNT head coach?

After a draw to Sweden, the U.S. Women’s National Team was eliminated in the 2023 World Cup. Will there be a coaching change for the USWNT?

After a hard-fought battle in the round of 16, the U.S. Women’s National Team was eliminated in the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup. The tie to Sweden marks the earliest exit for the United States in the Women’s World Cup. Also, it ends the United States’ chances for the first team to win the tournament three straight times.

And it would surprise no one to see a new head coach for the United States ahead of this next cycle, including the Olympics and another World Cup in four years.

Earlier this week, ex-USWNT captain Carli Lloyd called out her former teammates for celebrating a tie to Portugal after a below-average performance. Lloyd holds her former team to a higher standard despite the current USWNT head coach Vlatko Andonovski deflecting Lloyd’s comments toward his team.

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Fans on social media our lashing out toward the Americans’ below-average performance in the 2023 World Cup, requesting Lloyd to take over Andonovski’s role as USWNT head coach. Does Lloyd have the credentials to take over as head coach for the U.S. Women’s National Team?

Lloyd’s Qualifications

Lloyd is a Fox Sports analyst and might be considered for the USWNT head coaching spot if Andonovski gets let go after an early tournament exit. The former Rutgers Women’s Soccer standout knows what it takes to win (she has won two World Cups and has three Olympic medals), and USWNT needs an experienced leader to get them over the hump.

The New Jersey native from Delran, New Jersey, has 134 career goals and 64 assists while appearing in 316 games for the USWNT. Lloyd is known for performances in high-pressure moments, scoring game-winners at Rutgers, in the SheBelieves Cup, the 2008 and 2012 Olympics gold medal games, and the 2015 World Cup final.

During her four years at Rutgers, Lloyd is the only Scarlet Knight to earn First-Team All-Big East Honors four times in her career (2001-2004). Also, she got named the 2001 Big East Rookie of the Year. The Rutgers all-time points (117) and goals (50) leader can be a strong candidate for the possible USWNT head coach position.

Lloyd traveled the world with the National Team and played in two U.S. Women’s professional leagues. She played for the Chicago Red Stars, Sky Blue, and Atlanta Beat in the Women’s Premier Soccer League. After playing in the WPS, she joined the National Women’s Soccer League and played for the Western New York Flash, Houston Dash, and Sky Blue FC. Her last season came in Manchester City, where she joined the Champions League in 2017.

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Carli Lloyd rips into USWNT following World Cup tie: ‘You’re lucky to not be going home right now’

Carli Lloyd calls out the United States women’s national team following a disappointing tie.

Carli Lloyd wasn’t having any of it following the United States women’s national team nearly being bounced from the World Cup. A national team legend and former Rutgers women’s soccer star, Lloyd didn’t hold back following the United States tying Portugal in the final match of the group stages.

With the tie, the United States squeaked into the knockout rounds of the World Cup. The twice-defending champions were expected to ease into the next round of the tournament.

Instead, they struggled against Vietnam in their opening match and then looked lackluster in ties against the Netherlands and then Portugal. The Americans finished a shocking second in their group but will advance to the second round.

Following the match, she responded to video of some members of the United States national team dancing on the field. Others took selfies with fans.

“I have never witnessed – and just seeing these images for the first time right now on the desk,” Lloyd said on the set of Fox Sports following the tie with Portugal,

“I’ve never witnessed something like that. There’s a difference between being respectful of the fans and saying hello to your family, but to be dancing to be smiling. I mean, the player of the match was that post. You’re lucky to not be going home right now.”

At Rutgers, Lloyd was a standout performer and an All-Big East selection. She then continued her development to become one of the best players in the women’s game.

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Lloyd made over 300 international appearances for the United States She appeared in three World Cups (winning two) and three Olympics (two gold medals, one bronze).

 

Host Rob Stone tee’ed up Lloyd’s reaction this morning on Fox as the video of the celebrating Americans played on the screen.

“These are not the images we should be expecting to see from a team that survived Portugal and survived to get to the round of 16,” Stone said.

“I appreciate them taking care of the fans. But let me tell you, Carli Lloyd’s butt would be back in the locker room, kicking things, throwing things.”

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Carli Lloyd sees USWNT as ‘disjointed’ in FIFA Women’s World Cup opener.

Carli Lloyd weighs in on the United States women’s national team and their opening match against Vietman.

Carli Lloyd, a legend for both the Rutgers women’s soccer program and the United States women’s national team, wasn’t considered by what some considered a lackluster first game from the Americans in the FIFA Women’s World Cup.

The United States, considered the favorite in this summer’s World Cup, beat Vietnam 3-0 in their opening match of the tournament. Given that there was talk of the Americans potentially scoring double-digit goals, the performance was certainly a bit off from a team that is looking to three-peat.

As part of the Fox Sports broadcast team at the World Cup, which is co-hosted by Australia and New Zealand, Lloyd wasn’t terribly concerned by the final scoreline. The United States squandered several good chances in front of goal and had a difficult time threading that final pass through a very low block from Vietnam.

Lloyd followed up a standout collegiate career at Rutgers with over 300 international appearances, three World Cup medals (won two) and three Olympic medals (two gold medals, one bronze).

The United States held 65.9 percent possession in the win.

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“The game has come a long way and Vietnam actually came out and held their own for a bit. First game, they did score three goals, could they have scored several more? Absolutely,” Lloyd said on the broadcast.

“I would say my biggest takeaway was they still seem a bit disjointed. There’s not a lot of cohesion going. You saw the first goal with Sophia Smith there was link-up between (Lindsey) Horan, (Alex) Morgan and Smith. From an overall standpoint, it seemed a bit disjointed if we were to compare to coming into the 2019 World Cup where I felt like the whole team was firing on all cylinders.

“You don’t have to be your best but it’s going to take a lot.”

 

There was certainly some squad rotation from head coach Vlatko Andonovski as he looks to ready his squad for a long and grueling tournament. They next play against the Netherlands on July 26.

Lloyd thinks that the lack of cohesion and link-up play stems from the relative unknown nature of the team that took the field on Friday.

“For starters, that lineup hasn’t played together, yet. They just rolled out that lineup. It’s just getting on the same page, it’s hard to break down a low block. I felt at times there was some individual brilliance in taking on the dribble but you need a little more 3v2s, a little more combination in the center of the park Pull them out a little bit, suck them in, then you can go wide,” Lloyd said.

“I think coming out in the second half, they did a better job of putting inc crosses and stuff like that.”

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Watch: USWNT, Rutgers legend Carli Lloyd previews the FIFA World Cup

Carli Lloyd talks about the United States national team in the FIFA Women’s World Cup.

Now working with Fox Sports, former United States international Carli Lloyd believes that the Americans enter this FIFA World Cup with a target on their collective backs. Lloyd, born and raised in New Jersey, got her career started as a midfielder at Rutgers.

That career culminated in over 300 international appearances, three World Cup medals (won two) and three Olympics (two gold medals, one bronze).

Now working as an analyst for Fox, the broadcast partner for the tournament, Lloyd knows and understands the pressure on the United States. The Americans have won the last two World Cups. A win in this tournament would be the first-ever three-peat in World Cup history.

“It’s business as usual. The approach is always that the US is the favorite, the No. 1 team in the world. Everyone wants to go out there and beat them, there is a target on their back,” Lloyd said in a preview for Fox this week.

“They’re most likely not talking about a three-peat or really talking about the history they could potentially make. Everybody just knows that, they know in the back of their mind that history is at stake.”

The United States are the unquestioned favorites in this tournament. But there are a lot of other factors at play that could derail their plans for a parade.

This is the most balanced World Cup in the history of the women’s game as the standard of play and competition globally continues to rise. There are also time zone issues with this World Cup be jointly hosted by Australia and New Zealand.

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“Ultimately it comes down to one game at a time. You can’t get ahead of yourself. The moment you get ahead of yourself is probably the moment you get knocked out or something. It’s really important to first and foremost come out first in their group – that’s their first battle,” Lloyd said.

“Once they hopefully do that, the next challenge is going to be making sure that they get past that knockout round.”

At Rutgers, Lloyd was four times named All-Big East. While with the Scarlet Knights, she played for the United States U21 national team.

 

Former Rutgers goalkeeper Casey Murphy cites New Jersey roots ahead of FIFA Women’s World Cup

Former Rutgers women’s soccer goalkeeper Casey Murphy is heading to the FIFA Women’s World Cup.

Rutgers women’s soccer will be represented at the FIFA Women’s World Cup this month by Casey Murphy. The goalkeeper, born in New Jersey, has been an influential part of the team over the past five years.

Born in Bridgewater, the 27-year old Murphy is one of the most accomplished players to ever be developed by the Rutgers soccer program. Currently a standout goalkeeper for the North Carolina Courage in the NWSL, Murphy made her international debut at the senior level in 2021 in a friendly at Australia.

Heading into the FIFA Women’s World Cup, she has 14 appearances with the national team. She played four years at Rutgers, with her final season in 2017 culminating with being a finalist for the Hermann Trophy, given to the top player in college soccer.

Murphy is likely the backup to incumbent starter Alyssa Naeher, although it wouldn’t be a surprise to see the New Jersey native get rolled out during the World Cup.

In a recent interview with North Carolina station WRAL, Murphy talked about this moment in her professional career as fulfilling a dream she has had from a young age.

“I remember watching the national team from a really young age. A lot of big names came out of New Jersey, and that’s where I was born and raised,” Murphy told WRAL.

“Now, being on that team, yeah, it’s pretty awesome.”

This is now the fifth straight World Cup where Rutgers women’s soccer has had an alum on the United States national team roster. The previous four World Cups, beginning in 2007, saw former Scarlet Knight Carli Lloyd as part of the selection.

As a goalkeeper, Murphy must be ready to not just spearhead the defense, but potentially face some pressure-packed moments on the world’s greatest stage for the sport. It is something she says she relishes.

She does so on a team that is favored to yet again win the FIFA Women’s World Cup.

“It’s a lot of weight on your shoulders,” Murphy said during her interview. “You’re the last line of defense, and you don’t want to be the one to make a mistake.”