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Women's soccer team falls to No. 1, rebounds with win

Terry Lafevers

Issue date: 10/18/05 Section: Sports
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The Ohio State women's soccer team (6-7-2, 3-5-0 Big Ten) lost a hard fought 1-0 contest to the No. 1 Penn State Nittany Lions (15-0-0, 7-0-0 Big Ten) Friday at the Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium.

The game drew a season-high crowd of 2,079 as OSU unsuccessfully attempted to break the NCAA women's soccer attendance record of 6,527.

The Buckeyes had the tough task of containing PSU's All-American senior forward Tiffany Weimer. Although the Buckeyes kept her under wraps for most of the night, their one mistake was crucial.

The only goal of the game came off a brilliant pass from Penn State defender Natalie Jacobs, who put ball just past two OSU defenders to set up Weimer with an easy chip shot over OSU sophomore goalkeeper Staci Sinkway in the sixth minute of the game.

"We played really well," junior defender Melissa Miller said. "We stepped up and did what we needed to do. They got a goal right away but we fought back."

After the goal, OSU evened play for the first half, but could not find an equalizer. The second half was a similar story.

"I was pleased with the response that my team showed after giving up a goal. They put their shoulders back and fought harder, and ultimately that's what you are looking for from a young team," coach Lori Walker said.

The rest of the game was a physical affair. Penn State ended the game with 16 fouls to OSU's 14, but the Buckeyes received the only booking of the game when junior defender and co-captain Emily Francis knocked down Weimer in the 12th minute of the match.

There were many opportunities for both teams to score, but after the early goal neither team was able to convert on any of those opportunities. OSU especially had some chances late in the game to knot the match, but the Buckeye forwards seemed to be too hesitant with their shot selection and ended up not getting a clean shot off.

"Penn State's defense was good; I think we had opportunities that we weren't willing to take half chances," Walker said. "I've got young players right now that want every goal to be a World Cup-quality goal. A toe poke counts just as much as a bicycle kick so we have to take chances and shoot the ball more."
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