SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer

The SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team represents Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) in the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) of NCAA Division I soccer. The Cougars play their home matches on Bob Guelker Field at Ralph Korte Stadium located in the southwest corner of the SIUE campus in Edwardsville, Illinois.

SIU Edwardsville Cougars
men's soccer
2025 SIU Edwardsville Cougars men's soccer team
Founded1967; 59 years ago (1967)
UniversitySouthern Illinois University Edwardsville
Head coachCale Wassermann (7th season)
ConferenceOVC
LocationEdwardsville, Illinois, US
StadiumRalph Korte Stadium
(capacity: 4,000)
NicknameCougars
ColorsRed and white[1]
   
Home
Away
NCAA tournament championships
1972*, 1979
NCAA tournament runner-up
1975, 2004*
NCAA tournament College Cup
1972*, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1982, 2001*, 2004*, 2005*
NCAA tournament Quarterfinals
1970, 1971, 1972*, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1982, 2001*, 2004*, 2005*
NCAA tournament Round of 16
1969, 1970, 1971, 1972*, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1982, 2001*, 2003*, 2004*, 2005*, 2006*, 2007*, 2016
NCAA tournament appearances
1969, 1970, 1971, 1972*, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1997*, 2001*, 2003*, 2004*, 2005*, 2006*, 2007*, 2014, 2016, 2023, 2024
Conference tournament championships
1997*, 2002*, 2004*, 2006, 2014, 2016, 2023, 2024
Conference regular season championships
1987, 1997*, 2001*, 2003*, 2004*, 2005*, 2006*, 2015, 2023, 2024
* - at Division II level

It was announced on June 2, 2017, that the Cougars' men's soccer and wrestling teams would become affiliate members of the Mid-American Conference beginning in the 2018 season.[2] Through the cooperative efforts of the MVC and the MAC, the Cougars soccer team made the move a year earlier than originally announced and played the 2017 season in the MAC.[3]

On November 30, 2018, it was reported that Mario Sanchez had resigned to accept the position of director of youth development and community relations for Louisville City FC of the United Soccer League. The search for a permanent replacement began immediately.[4] On January 18, Michigan State assistant coach Cale Wassermann was named as the Cougars' new head coach.[5]

SIUE would return to MVC men's soccer in 2021.[6] In March 2023, the Cougars' primary conference home of the OVC announced it would launch a men's soccer league in the 2023 fall season with SIUE as one of its eight members.[7]

History

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Beginning: Bob Guelker era

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The SIUE soccer program first entered competition in 1967[8] under the leadership of National Soccer Hall of Fame coach Bob Guelker.[9] Guelker had been hired away from St. Louis University, where he had also started the program, winning five NCAA championships in eight seasons, including the first NCAA soccer title in 1959.[10] The Cougars were invited to the NCAA tournament in Guelker's third year at the helm and reached the Elite 8 the next two seasons.

When the NCAA started a second division for soccer in 1972, SIUE moved into the new division, since its other athletic programs were also in Division II, and a number of other college soccer powers also made the move. That team went 11–0–3 for the season, winning the 1972 championship.[11] (Of the 24 schools in that inaugural Division II tournament, SIUE and 7 others currently play in Division I (3 others moved into Division I in 1973 but have since moved down), 5 others would later win Division II championships, and Akron, Hartwick, and SIUE would later win Division I crowns.[12][13])

After winning the Division II title, SIUE took advantage of the NCAA rule then in effect that allowed Division II schools to play one sport in Division I and one sport in Division III, and moved to Division I. In the next ten seasons, Guelker's Cougars were invited to the Division I tournament every year, advancing to four College Cup semifinals appearances and winning the Division I title in 1979.[9]

Toward the end of Guelker's tenure, scandal in some of the university's other sports programs brought about a major reduction of funding for all sports, and the program went into a period of decline.[14]

Guelker headed the program until his death in February 1986. In his nineteen seasons, only the first (3–3–0) was a non-winning one, and he compiled a record of 216–67–21, with fourteen appearances in the NCAA tournament (thirteen in Division I).

The Ed Huneke era

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Coach Guelker was succeeded by former Cougar player Ed Huneke. During Huneke's years, the program moved from a Division I independent to membership in the short-lived Big Central Soccer Conference, back to being an independent, a short associate membership in the Mid-Continent Conference, and then reluctantly stepped down to join the Division II Great Lakes Valley Conference (GLVC) in 1996.

During the university's twelve years in the GLVC, Huneke's Cougars won six regular season titles, four conference tournaments, and received seven invitations to the NCAA Division II tournament, where they reached the Division II College Cup semifinals three times and were national runner-up in 2004.[8]

Huneke coached the Cougars for twenty-two seasons, building a record of 251–155–34.[9]

The Kevin Kalish era

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From Huneke's retirement in 2008 through the 2013 season, the program was led by Kevin Kalish, who took it both back into Division I and into competition in the Missouri Valley Conference (MVC). During the Cougars' first season (2010) in the MVC, they finished second in both the conference regular season (to Creighton) and the conference tournament (to Bradley).

In 2012, the Cougars were ranked during the season for the first time since the 1980s,[15][16][17][18] finished second in the MVC in both the regular season and the conference tournament (both to NCAA semifinalist Creighton), and narrowly missed returning to the Division I tournament for the first time since 1982.[8] For the season, Kalish was named the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) Midwest Region Coach of the Year,[19] and his staff was named the Missouri Valley Conference Coaching Staff of the year.[20]

Kalish compiled a 49–46–14 record in his six seasons.[9]

On December 6, 2012, it was announced that Kevin Kalish was leaving for a job that would allow him to spend more time with his family.[21]

The Interim

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On December 6, 2013, Associate Head Coach Scott Donnelly was named to succeed Kevin Kalish and become SIUE's fourth head coach.[21] For the second year in a row, Donnelly's incoming players were rated one of the top recruiting classes in the country.[22][23]

On August 10, 2014, it was announced that Donnelly had suddenly and unexpectedly resigned after being recruited to be the new Technical Advisor for the Northeast region of the United States Soccer Federation (U.S. Soccer). Seventh year goalkeepers coach Brian Jones and first year assistant coach David Korn were named co-head coaches.[24]

The Cougars started the 2014 season in frustrating fashion, with five overtime games in the first six and a record of 0–6–2 after eight games. Then they entered Missouri Valley Conference play and ran off four straight victories. An embarrassing loss at NIU was followed by a tie at nationally ranked Louisville and another tie at home to eventual MVC champion Missouri State. Completing the regular season at 5–8–2, the Cougars entered the MVC Tournament as the #2 seed and an opening round bye at Bradley. The Cougars rallied from trailing early to defeat Bradley 2–1 in the semifinals. Then, in their school record ninth overtime game of the season, the Cougars downed Missouri State 1–0 to win SIUE's first MVC Tournament Championship and earn a spot in the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship for the first time since 1982[25] and then advanced to the second round.[26]

Athletic Director Dr. Brad Hewitt announced on December 5 that SIUE would conduct a nationwide search for a new head coach stating, "We will secure the best possible leadership to maintain and enhance the strong academic, athletic and community engagement standards that define SIUE Soccer and SIUE Athletics.". David Korn remained as associate head coach and Scott Gyllenberg was retained as assistant coach. Brian Jones, however, departed to become the goalkeepers coach of the professional Saint Louis Football Club of the United Soccer Leagues.[27]

The Mario Sanchez era

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On January 27, 2015, Mario Sanchez, the associate head coach of the Louisville Cardinals was introduced as the new Cougars head coach.[28]

In Sanchez' first season, the Cougars went 12–4–1 overall and 5–1–0 in the MVC, earning the first conference title since joining the league in 2010.[29] With a Rating Percentage Index (RPI) of 39 (out of 206 teams), the Cougars were 28th of the teams that did not receive an automatic bid to the 2015 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship; since there were only 24 at-large berths available, SIUE was passed over.[30][31]

In Sanchez' second season, the Cougars won the 2016 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Soccer Tournament, the team's second title in three years, and earned the MVC's automatic bid to the 2016 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship.[32] The Cougars tied #13 Michigan State 1–1 and advanced to the second round on penalty kicks 9–8. They tied #11 Butler 0–0 and advanced to the third round on penalty kicks 5–4. They finally lost at #2 Wake Forest 2–1 in the program's first Division I Sweet 16 game since 1982.[33]

On May 9, 2017, SIUE and Saint Louis U. (SLU) verbally agreed to resume their soccer rivalry in the 2018 and 2019 seasons. The annual Bronze Boot game was once the premier rivalry game in U.S. college soccer. The 1972, 1973, and 1980 games rank as the 14th, 7th, and 1st largest crowds in NCAA soccer history. “I remember hearing about the Bronze Boot;” declared SIUE coach Mario Sanchez. “It was one of college soccer’s biggest games every year. I’m ready for it to happen again." While the annual match was once played at Busch Memorial Stadium, the 2018 game will be at SLU's Hermann Stadium, with the 2019 meeting moving to SIUE's Ralph Korte Stadium. SLU leads the series 9–26–1.[34]

The news was released on November 30, 2018, that Mario Sanchez resigned to join the Louisville City FC as director of youth development and community relations for the United Soccer League team.[4]

The Cale Wassermann era

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On January 18, 2019, following a national search, Michigan State assistant coach Cale Wassermann was named as the Cougars' new head coach.[5]

On June 12, 2020, a month after the MAC announced the cancellation of its men's soccer tournament, MVC Commissioner Doug Elgin and SIUE Director of Athletics Tim Hall announced that SIUE men's soccer would return to the Missouri Valley Conference beginning with the 2021 season.[6]

After SIUE had played two seasons in the MVC, the OVC announced on March 28, 2023 that it would add men's soccer for the 2023 season and beyond. The new league includes SIUE, three other full OVC members, and four single-sport affiliates.[7]

On October 22, 2023, the Cougars clinched the regular season championship of the OVC. It was SIUE's first regular season soccer title since 2015 and the first OVC regular season title in any men's sport.[35] On November 11, the Cougars added the Inaugural OVC Men's Soccer Tournament title. In defeating Incarnate Word 1-0, they earned the OVC's Automatic qualifier to the NCAA Tournament, the program's first bid in seven years. They lost a hard-fought match at Memphis 2-1 to finish the season 16-1-3.

On Halloween, October 31, 2024, the Cougars clinched their second regular season OVC championship.[36] On November 16, the Cougars added their second OVC Men's Soccer Tournament title. In defeating Houston Christian 3-2 on a second overtime golden goal, they earned the OVC's Automatic qualifier to the NCAA Tournament.[37] After losing OVC Goalkeeper of the Year Rob Gjelaj to a leg injury during pre-game warmups, the Cougars lost on a snowy afternoon at 23rd ranked Western Michigan 5-1 to finish the season 12-5-3.[38]

Players

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Current roster

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As of Nov 2025[39]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  LUX Noah Scheidweiler
2 MF  USA Tyler Sargent
3 DF  AUS Elliott Forestier
4 DF  USA Wes Gibson
5 DF  ENG Archie McDonnell
6 MF  ESP Carles Zomeño
7 FW  ISR Ron Arie
8 MF  USA Ethan Hackenberg
9 FW  ENG Evan Howard
10 FW  AUS Hugo Cornish
12 DF  ESP Enrique Ezquerro
13 DF  LUX Paulo Júnior
14 MF  USA Zach Renz
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF  USA Bobby Pauly
16 DF  USA Garrison Hill
18 MF  USA Ben Perkins
19 DF  USA Colin Bastianoni
20 DF  CRC Mathias Clausen
21 FW  USA Ryley Gibbs
22 MF  USA Jake Karolczak
23 MF  ENG Daniel Murray
24 MF  USA Karson Gibbs
25 DF  USA Anton Mosley
29 GK  USA Ethan Kornas
30 GK  USA Patrick O'Day

All Americans

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Through the years, more than 70 Cougars have gone on to play professionally, and 28 have been named All-Americans for their play at SIUE.

  • United StatesJack Blake 1970
  • United StatesJohn Carenza 1970–71
  • United StatesVince Fassi 1972
  • United StatesTom Galati 1973
  • United StatesJohn Stremlau 1973 & 1975
  • United StatesChris Carenza 1974
  • United StatesBob Kessen 1974
  • United StatesGreg Makowski 1975–77
  • United StatesMike Kelley 1978
  • United StatesTom Groark 1981 First Team
  • United StatesEd Gettemeier 1982 Third Team
  • United StatesChris Hundelt 1983 Third Team
  • United StatesBill Stallings 1984 Third Team
  • United StatesSteve Trittschuh 1985 Third Team &1986 First Team
  • United StatesMatt Little 1997 First Team
  • United StatesJustin McMillian 2001 First Team
  • United StatesChris Camacho 2002 Third Team
  • Trinidad and TobagoAddae Rique 2003 First Team
  • United StatesCal Thomas 2003 First Team
  • United StatesTim Velten 2003 Third Team
  • United StatesMichael Burgund 2004 Second Team
  • United StatesMike Banner 2005 First Team
  • United StatesKevin Thibodeau 2005 Second Team
  • United StatesJohn Matthews 2006 Third Team
  • United StatesGreg Crook 2007 Second Team
  • United StatesZach Bauer 2007 Third Team
  • United StatesRandy Roy 2007 Second Team
  • United StatesDustin Attarian 2007 Second Team

Three Cougars have been named to the NSCAA Men's University Division Scholar All-America Teams.

  • United StatesRyan Bauer, 2012, Second Team
  • United StatesMatt Polster. 2014. First Team
  • United StatesJacob Wieser. 2015. First Team

Coaches

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Current staff

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As of 15 August 2025[40]
Position Staff
Head coachCale Wassermann
Assistant coachJordan Grant
Assistant coachDrew Romig
Assistant coachAlsadiq Hasan

Coaching history

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Source:[9]

# Name Tenure
1
Bob Guelker1967–1985
2
Ed Huneke1986–2007
3
Kevin Kalish2008–2013
4
Brian Jones2014
5
David Korn2014
6
Mario Sanchez2015–2018
7
Cale Wassermann2019–present

Statistics

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Record by year

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Reference [41]

Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
SIU Edwardsville (Single Division Independent) (1967–1971)
1967 Bob Guelker 3-3-0
1968 Bob Guelker 10-0-0
1969 Bob Guelker 10-1-1NCAA Round of 16
1970 Bob Guelker 9-3-0NCAA Elite 8
1971 Bob Guelker 10-2-1NCAA Elite 8
SIU Edwardsville (Division II Independent) (1972–Only)
1972 Bob Guelker 11-0-3NCAA Div. II College Cup Champion
SIU Edwardsville (Division I Independent) (1973–1987)
1973 Bob Guelker 11-2-1NCAA Elite 8
1974 Bob Guelker 12-3-0NCAA Elite 8
1975 Bob Guelker 14-4-0NCAA College Cup Runner-up
1976 Bob Guelker 12-4-0NCAA Elite 8
1977 Bob Guelker 12-4-1NCAA College Cup 3rd Place
1978 Bob Guelker 14-3-1NCAA Elite 8
1979 Bob Guelker 19-2-3NCAA College Cup Champion
1980 Bob Guelker 10-8-2NCAA 1st round
1981 Bob Guelker 13-4-1NCAA 1st round
1982 Bob Guelker 15-4-1NCAA College Cup 3rd Place
1983 Bob Guelker 10-6-2
1984 Bob Guelker 8-7-4
1985 Bob Guelker 13-7-0
Bob Guelker: 216-67-21 .745
1986 Ed Huneke 11-5-2
SIU Edwardsville (Big Central Soccer Conference) (1987–1990)
1987 Ed Huneke 9-8-32-0-2t-1st of 5
1988 Ed Huneke 10-9-24-2-02nd of 7
1989 Ed Huneke 11–9–12–4–0t-4th of 6
1990 Ed Huneke 11–10–14–2-03rd of 7
SIU Edwardsville (Division I Independent) (1991–1993)
1991 Ed Huneke 9-11-0
1992 Ed Huneke 12–5-1
1993 Ed Huneke 4-14-0
SIU Edwardsville (Mid-Continent Conference) (1994–1995)
1994 Ed Huneke 6-12-03-5-04th of 5 West
1995 Ed Huneke 3–13–12-5-15th of 5 West
SIU Edwardsville (Great Lakes Valley Conference (Division II)) (1996–2007)
1996 Ed Huneke 11–7-16-4-16th of 12
1997 Ed Huneke 18–2-12–4–11st of 12NCAA Div. II 1st round
1998 Ed Huneke 7–11–15–6-07th of 12
1999 Ed Huneke 11-7–18-2–13rd of 12
2000 Ed Huneke 11-7–28-3–03rd of 12
2001 Ed Huneke 17-3-39-0-11st (tie) of 11NCAA Div. II College Cup 3rd Place
2002 Ed Huneke 13-4–27–2–12nd (tie) of 11
2003 Ed Huneke 16–4-110-0-01st of 11NCAA Div. II Round of 16
2004 Ed Huneke 19-3-28-0-21st of 11NCAA Div. II College Cup Runner-up
2005 Ed Huneke 16-3-311–0–11st of 14NCAA Div. II College Cup 3rd Place
2006 Ed Huneke 15-4-310-2–11st of 14NCAA Div. II Round of 16
2007 Ed Huneke 11–4-39–2–22nd of 14NCAA Div. II Round of 16
Ed Huneke: 251-155-34 .609
SIU Edwardsville (Division I Independent) (2008–2009)
2008 Kevin Kalish 5–8-1
2009 Kevin Kalish 5-9-3
SIU Edwardsville (Missouri Valley Conference) (2010–2016)
2010 Kevin Kalish 10-5-44–1–22nd of 8
2011 Kevin Kalish 8–8–41-4-16th of 7
2012 Kevin Kalish 13-7-04–2–02nd of 7
2013 Kevin Kalish 8-9-23-3-04th of 7
Kevin Kalish: 49-46-14 .514
2014 Brian Jones & David Korn 8-9-44-1-12nd of 7NCAA 2nd round
Jones & Korn: 8-9-4 .4764-1-1
2015 Mario Sanchez 12–4–25–1–01st of 7
2016 Mario Sanchez 10–5–74–1–32nd of 7NCAA Round of 16
SIU Edwardsville (Mid-American Conference) (2017–2020)
2017 Mario Sanchez 7–10–12–3–03rd of 6
2018 Mario Sanchez 9–5–41–3–15th of 6
Mario Sanchez: 38–24–14 .59212–8–4
2019 Cale Wassermann 8–5–42–1–2t-2nd of 6
2020 Cale Wassermann 5–5–02–5–06th of 6
SIU Edwardsville (Missouri Valley Conference) (2021–2022)
2021 Cale Wassermann 6–10–24–6–03rd of 6
2022 Cale Wassermann 5–9–22–6–06th of 7
SIU Edwardsville (Ohio Valley Conference) (2023–present)
2023 Cale Wassermann 16–1–39–0–11st of 8NCAA 1st Round
2024 Cale Wassermann 12–5–38–1–11st of 8NCAA 1st Round
Cale Wassermann: 52–35–14 .58427–19–4
Total:614–333–102158–71–25

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Conference standings

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Program inaugurated, 1966–67
Independent 1967–71 (Single NCAA Division)
Division II Independent 1972
Division I Independent 1973–86
1987 Big Central Soccer Conference standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Quincy2021342
SIU Edwardsville202983
Wisconsin–Milwaukee1211182
Marquette1219111
Northern Illinois1306102
Cincinnati*000991
Rankings from NSCAA
*-Charter member did not compete
1988 Big Central Soccer Conference standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Quincy $5101262
SIU Edwardsville4201092
Cincinnati3211272
Wisconsin–Milwaukee3309120
Drake2221074
Marquette2311272
Northern Illinois0607101
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from NSCAA
1989 Big Central Soccer Conference standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Cincinnati5101441
Wisconsin–Milwaukee5101253
Northern Illinois $4201442
Quincy3301281
SIU Edwardsville2401191
Drake1509100
Louisville1508112
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from NSCAA
1990 Big Central Soccer Conference standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 20 Wisconsin–Milwaukee $4101642
SIU Edwardsville42011101
Drake4201084
Wright State3101262
Cincinnati3309102
Quincy1407110
Louisville0602132
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from NSCAA
Division I Independent 1991–93
1994 Mid-Continent Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
East
Buffalo5011171
Central Connecticut3211562
Valparaiso2402131
Northeastern Illinois1501190
West
Eastern Illinois6111231
Kansas City53010100
Quincy341884
SIU Edwardsville3506120
Western Illinois2604150
† 1994 Mid-Con Tournament winner
As of December 13, 1994
Rankings from NSCAA
1995 Mid-Continent Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
East
Central Connecticut5011533
Buffalo321982
Valparaiso3305121
Northeastern Illinois0603141
West
Western Illinois7101541
Kansas City4409100
Quincy341591
Eastern Illinois3503120
SIU Edwardsville2513131
† 1995 Mid-Con Tournament winner
As of December 12, 1994
Rankings from NSCAA
GLVC Standings 1996–2007 N/A
Division I Independent 2008–09
2010 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 14 Creighton5111352
SIU Edwardsville4121054
Missouri State412873
Drake421882
Bradley3311193
Evansville3407101
Eastern Illinois1514121
Central Arkansas0703130
2010 MVC Tournament winner
As of December 14, 2010
Rankings from NSCAA
2011 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Missouri State510982
No. 4 Creighton5102121
No. 25 Bradley4201562
Drake3301181
Central Arkansas1322124
SIU Edwardsville141884
Evansville0515111
As of December 13, 2011
Rankings from NSCAA
2012 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 4 Creighton5011642
SIU Edwardsville4201370
Bradley3211064
Evansville321981
Drake2226114
Central Arkansas141891
Missouri State060584
As of December 11, 2012
Rankings from NSCAA
2013 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Missouri State5101152
Drake312884
Bradley3211472
SIU Edwardsville330892
Loyola Chicago2316112
Evansville2401081
Central Arkansas0424112
Rankings from November 25, 2013 NSCAA
2014 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Missouri State402954
SIU Edwardsville411894
Evansville4206111
Drake3305113
Loyola Chicago222865
Bradley1509110
Central Arkansas0512131
As of November 23, 2014
Rankings from NSCAA
2015 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
SIUE5101252
Bradley4117101
Drake3121353
Missouri State321665
Loyola Chicago2221045
Central Arkansas1502151
Evansville0603130
As of November 22, 2015
Rankings from NSCAA
2016 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 21 Loyola Chicago +6111441
No. 22 SIUE4131057
Evansville422983
Central Arkansas431773
Missouri State341982
Drake2516121
Bradley0712153
As of 13 December 2016
Rankings from NSCAA
2017 Mid-American Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 9 Western Michigan +5001741
No. 3 Akron4101842
SIU Edwardsville2307101
West Virginia122964
Bowling Green131791
Northern Illinois0413111
As of December 13, 2017
Rankings from United Soccer Coaches
2018 Mid-American Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 22 West Virginia +5001470
Bowling Green212674
Western Michigan1121163
No. 2 Akron1211572
SIU Edwardsville131954
Northern Illinois140891
As of December 11, 2018
Rankings from United Soccer Coaches
2019 Mid-American Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Akron4016102
Western Michigan2121162
SIUE212854
Northern Illinois2307101
Bowling Green2301371
West Virginia0411092
As of 25 November 2019
Rankings from United Soccer Coaches
Source: MAC
2020 Mid-American Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Bowling Green521751
Western Michigan531731
West Virginia431631
Akron341442
Northern Illinois460581
SIU Edwardsville250550
As of May 3, 2021
Rankings from United Soccer Coaches
2021 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 22 Missouri State10001720
Loyola Chicago631952
SIU Edwardsville4606102
Evansville3614142
Drake370690
Bradley3705121
As of December 14, 2021
Rankings from United Soccer Coaches
Source: MVC
2022 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Missouri State6021224
Drake521744
Evansville323856
Belmont224747
UIC341592
SIU Edwardsville260592
Bradley1615113
As of December 13, 2022
Rankings from United Soccer Coaches
Source: MVC
2023 Ohio Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
SIU Edwardsville9011613
Incarnate Word433785
Liberty442963
Lindenwood #334776
Chicago State3435104
Eastern Illinois3524105
Houston Christian244486
Southern Indiana #1632123
As of December 12, 2023
Rankings from United Soccer Coaches
Source: OVC
2024 Ohio Valley Conference men's soccer standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
SIU Edwardsville8111253
Lindenwood #6221163
Houston Christian523875
Liberty532773
Incarnate Word325666
Western Illinois3708111
Southern Indiana #1722142
Eastern Illinois1812122
As of December 17, 2024
Rankings from United Soccer Coaches
Source: OVC

Attendance records

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Source:[42]

# Date Rival Location Game Att.
1 October 30, 1980 St. Louis Billikens Busch Memorial Stadium, St. Louis, MO 11h Annual Bronze Boot Game 22,512
7 November 8, 1973 St. Louis Billikens Busch Memorial Stadium, St. Louis, MO 4th Annual Bronze Boot Game 20,112
10 December 4, 1977 Brown Bears[n 1] Edwards Stadium, Berkeley, CA NCAA College Cup Semifinals 16,503
14 November 5, 1972 St. Louis Billikens Busch Memorial Stadium, St. Louis, MO 3rd Annual Bronze Boot Game ≥15,000
Notes
  1. Hartwick vs San Francisco also played in the same day.

Titles

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National

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Conference

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See also

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References

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  1. "Ohio Valley Conference Style Guide" (PDF). June 20, 2022. Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  2. "SIU-Edwardsville joins Mid-American Conference as affiliate member in two sports". Hustle Belt/Vox Media, Inc. June 2, 2017. Retrieved June 2, 2017.
  3. "SIUE men's soccer to join MAC immediately". The Telegraph. June 8, 2017. Retrieved June 8, 2017.
  4. 1 2 "Sanchez Departs Men's Soccer Post". Southern Illinois University Edwardsville. November 30, 2018. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  5. 1 2 "MEN'S SOCCER: Cale Wassermann named SIUE men's soccer coach". Edwardsville Intelligencer/Hearst. January 18, 2019. Retrieved January 20, 2019.
  6. 1 2 "MVC Adds SIUE As Men's Soccer Affiliate" (Press release). Missouri Valley Conference. June 12, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020.
  7. 1 2 "OVC Adds Men's Soccer as Championship Sport" (Press release). Ohio Valley Conference. March 28, 2023. Retrieved March 28, 2023.
  8. 1 2 3 All-time results at siuecougars.com
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