Men’s
Soccer Hits First Bump
By Sehban Zaidi The
Oberlin College men’s soccer team sustained two defeats this
week, losing games to Carnegie Mellon University at home and Mt.
Union College away, before recovering on Thursday to defeat Lake
Erie College. Saturday and Tuesday’s back-to-back losses were
the first setbacks in what has been a successful season thus far.
The Yeomen’s record now stands at 4-2-1.
The
performances and results of the first two games were in stark contrast
to last weekend’s back-to-back victories. The home defeat
to Carnegie Mellon was a 2-0 affair and marked the first time this
season that the Yeomen had failed to score. Carnegie Mellon dominated
high balls throughout the game and Oberlin recorded no shots on
goal for the first half.
Sophomore Alec Potzrebowski and junior Philip Kreniske both received
yellow cards in a game where Oberlin played a mostly defensive role.
The Yeomen did threaten to stage a comeback late in the second half,
with senior Jay Rosenthal forcing a good save from the Carnegie
Mellon goalkeeper.
Away
at Mt. Union, the Yeomen scored first. Even though Mt. Union equalized,
the teams were well matched and balanced at halftime, which was
illustrated by the 1-1 score line.
“After we grabbed the early goal, I thought we were going
to get back on track with a victory,” first-year David Wilson
said. “But we started to have to some breakdowns, gifted them
a goal to even the score, then never really recovered after they
went up a goal.”
The second half saw the Yeomen concede three goals to end the game
in a 4-1 score in favor of Mt. Union.
Oberlin had not been down a goal until this week’s game and
had not been required to stage a comeback.
“The biggest thing we need to work on is how we react when
we go down a goal. We need to work collectively with a tactical
theme in mind,” head coach Blake New said. New is already
planning ahead: “We will change the way that we defend set
pieces and corners and make some adjustments to improve there.”
“You can call it a hiccup, you can call it a serious matter,
but here’s the bottom line. We’ve known all along that
we’re a good team, but no one has said that we will never
lose,” senior Will Singer said. “Our challenge now is
to understand what we have to do to become a better team by the
time we start playing conference games.”
“It
hasn’t been an enjoyable experience,” Wilson, the scorer
of Oberlin’s goal in the 4-1 loss, said, “mostly because
neither defeat was a matter of the other team being superior. It’s
been a problem with our preparation, and our execution of tactics.”
The Yeomen more than bounced back when they flipped the scoreline
around to win 4-1 over Lake Erie College. They came out firing and
took a 2-0 lead with goals from Wilson and Kreniske. Oberlin held
the lead through the end of the first half.
“The basic challenge in this game was for us to stay on our
game plan and not play down to their level,” senior Luke Eisenhauer
said.
The Yeomen succeeded in sticking with their game plan even after
Lake Erie managed to put a goal in on a breakaway in the second
half. Oberlin stayed composed and went on to score two more, coming
from first-year Robert Stupp and Kreniske.
“We had a lot of great overlapping runs from the outside defenders,”
Eisenhauer said. “That was the highlight of the game, they
got a lot of good crosses off.”
The
team has faced and lost two games to the demons of disorganization,
but recovered midweek to defeat Lake Erie.
“The real proving ground will be this Saturday,” Eisenhauer
said. “We’re still proving to ourselves that we can
implement our tactical plan under pressure.”
The Yeomen will face Muskingum College tomorrow on the road.
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