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2006 Records:
1-9-0 MIAC, 4-12-0 Overall
Recent Results:
Bethel 4, Saint Mary's 2 / Details
UW-Whitewater 1, Saint Mary's 0 / Details
This and That:
The Cardinals' 1-0 setback to UW-Whitewater last Sunday was their eighth one-goal loss of the season. … The loss to the Warhawks was also just the fourth time this season SMU failed to score at least one goal. … Mike Schmitt (Woodridge, Ill.) — one of five seniors who played their final collegiate game last Sunday — closed out the season as SMU's leader in goals (9) and points (22). … Schmitt's nine goals were one shy of his career high and his 22 points were a career best. … Schmitt closed out his career with 26 goals, ranking him No. 2 all-time, 10 goals behind SMU Hall of Famer Jerad Rassmussen. … James Kuhnle (Burlington, Wis.), who scored both of SMU's goals in its 4-2 loss to Bethel last Tuesday in the Cardinals' MIAC finale, was second to Schmitt in both goals (5) and points (11). … After winning three of their first five games, SMU managed just one win in its final 11 games, including a season-ending six-game losing streak. … Despite its 4-12-0 record, the Cardinals were only outscored by three goals, 33-30.


Playing for pride, Cardinals give UW-Whitewater a
run for their money in season-ending 1-0 setback



Mike
Schmitt

No. 2 all-time
in goals (26) in
a career
WINONA, Minn. — It was a game that, on paper, meant little to the Saint Mary's University men's soccer team.

There were not late-season dreams of a post-season berth. No hopes of a shot at a conference title.

In other words, there was nothing at stake when the Cardinals — stuck in the midst of a season-high five-game losing streak — took the field last Sunday for their nonconference season finale against UW-Whitewater.

Nothing except Cardinal pride.

And for SMU, playing for pride was incentive enough.

The Cardinals matched the nationally ranked Warhawks blow-for-blow for 85 minutes, before Jeff Derer broke the scoreless deadlock in the game's 86th minute to lift UW-Whitewater to a 1-0 victory at Ochrymowycz Field.

"It's a tough way to end the season, losing another one-goal game. But the guys should feel good about the way they played — that could very well have been the best game, start-to-finish we played all season," said SMU first-year coach Chris Dembiec, whose team's 12 losses this season included eight by one-goal. "These guys could have very easily come out and just went through the motions.

"Instead, they played their hearts out and gave a very good team — a team that year-in and year-out is battling for national playoff berths — a run for their money for 90 minutes," Dembiec added. "It was an unbelievable effort, and I'm very proud of all of them."

Freshman goalkeeper Jon Szafranski (Barrington, Ill.) kept the Cardinals in the game, making 11 saves, including nine in the first half. Szafranski robbed the Warhawks of sure goals on three separate occasions, stopping point-blank shots from Derer, Matthew Gehn and Nathan Haas in the game's opening 45 minutes.

It was more of the same from Szafranski in the second half, before the Warhawks finally broke through with Derer's seventh goal of the season with four minutes remaining in regulation.

"We knew coming in that we were going to have to play well defensively," said Dembiec, whose team closed out its season with a 4-12-0 overall record. "(Szafranski) played great and we created some pretty good chances of our own, we just weren't able to convert on them.

"I think there are a lot of positives we can take from this game as we head into the offseason," continued Dembiec. "We showed (against Whitewater) that we are capable of playing with anyone — we just have to find a way to do it on a more consistent basis next year."

The Cardinals will have to do that without five of its starters, however, as Sunday's game marked the end of the road for SMU seniors Mike Schmitt (Woodridge, Ill.), Jon Vik (St. Paul, Minn.), Mark Matyas (DePere, Wis.), Tim McAllister (Woodbury, Minn.) and Terrence Coonan (Fort Wayne, Ind.).

"We've got five holes to fill, no question about that," said Dembiec. "Those five guys have been our leaders all season — on and off the field — and we are going to miss their presence when we take the field again next season."