Virginia Tech reached the Men's College Cup for the first time with four first-year upperclassmen whose participation in college soccer has touched off a debate. Ringers or bona-fide students? Ohio
State is known as a football school, but the Buckeyes' march to the Men's College Cup has raised awareness about the men's soccer team. Wake Forest goalie
Brian
Edwards chose to return as a fifth-year senior instead of turning pro, while
Mike DeSantis chose to follow older brother
Mark to UMass, for whom they will form the College Cup's only starting brother tandem.
Transient aspect soils games' soul Virginia Tech features four first-year players who were imported
from Europe -- three Germans aged 25, 23 and 23 and an Englishman, 6-foot-6
Robert Edmans. According to
Richmond
Times-Dispatch columnist
Bob Lipper, they are in Blacksburg only for one semester or this academic year. He calls them "ringers," whose participation
"toys with the spirit of college athletics." Virginia Tech coach
Oliver Weiss thinks otherwise. "They are bona fide students," Weiss said. "They are serious
students. They are exceptional. They reflect the academic experience more than most kids. They're eligible by NCAA rules, and they're amateurs."
Best kind of busy It's exam week at Virginia Tech, but members of the men's soccer team should be excused if they're a bit distracted.
As the
Roanoke Star's
Mark Berman reports, the
Hokies are two wins
away from the school's first national championship in any sport. "Sometimes you're studying and you get that feeling like, 'Wow. I'm in the final four,'" midfielder
Scott Spangler says.
Goalkeeper's Goal: Edwards
returned to help Deacons win soccer title John Dell of the
Winston-Salem Journal profiles Wake Forest's
record-setting goalie
Brian Edwards. While his teammates have been sweating out final exams, Edwards has been sitting pretty. As a fifth-year senior, he only
needed one class to graduate, so he took Sociological Theory and skipped the optional exam. Edwards, who follows in the footsteps of Kansas City Wizards goalie
Will
Hesmer, chose to return to Wake to help the Demon Deacons in their quest for a national title. With a school record 43 career shutouts, he is a big factor why Wake heads to Cary as the Men's
College Cup favorite.
Postseason run should boost
program's image Everyone knows about Ohio State and its football team, which will be playing for the national championship in January, but Buckeye men's soccer coach
John Bluem says many players are still ignorant of his program. "'You have soccer at Ohio State?' We still hear that when we call some of the top recruits around the country," Bluem
tells
Jeremy McLaughlin of the
Columbus Dispatch. "They know about Ohio State, but didn't know we had a soccer
program."
UMass soccer brotherly affair Ron Chimelis of the
Springfield Republican profiles the
DeSantis brothers,
Mark and
Mike, starters for the University of Massachusetts. Mark likes to yell at his younger brother on the field, but they still hang out
together off the field. "Girls, grades, sports, we're always together for everything," Mike said. "I still get some confusion over which is which. He takes it a little more seriously than I do."