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2022 ACC women's soccer tournament
Soccer tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 2022 Atlantic Coast Conference women's soccer tournament was the 35th edition of the ACC Women's Soccer Tournament, which decided the Atlantic Coast Conference champion. Florida State was the defending champion.[1]
The first round was played at campus sites, while the semifinals and final were played at Sahlen's Stadium in Cary, NC.[2]
Florida State successfully defended their title, defeating Notre Dame in the Semifinals and North Carolina in the final, 2–1. This was the ninth title for Florida State as a program, and the first for head coach Brian Pensky. Florida State has won the past three ACC tournaments.[3]
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Qualification
The top six teams in the Atlantic Coast Conference earned a berth into the ACC Tournament. The top two teams earned a bye to the semifinals.[4] The final seedings were determined after the final day of the regular season on October 27, 2022. Multiple tiebreakers were required as teams finished with the same conference records. North Carolina and Florida State both finished with 8–2–0 conference records and tied for first place in the regular season. North Carolina defeated Florida State on October 20, during the regular season, and therefore earned the top seed in the tournament, while Florida State was the second seed. A second tiebreaker was required between Virginia and Duke as both teams finished 6–2–2 in conference play. Virginia defeated Duke on October 2, during the regular season, and earned the fourth seed, while Duke was the fifth seed.[5]
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Bracket
First Round October 30 ACCN | Semifinal November 3 ACCN | Championship November 6 ESPNU | ||||||||||||
1 | North Carolina (pen.) | 0 (7) | ||||||||||||
4 | Virginia | 1 | 5 | Duke | 0 (6) | |||||||||
5 | Duke | 2 | 1 | North Carolina | 1 | |||||||||
2 | Florida State | 2 | ||||||||||||
2 | Florida State (pen.) | 3 (4) | ||||||||||||
3 | Notre Dame (pen.) | 1 (5) | 3 | Notre Dame | 3 (2) | |||||||||
6 | Pittsburgh | 1 (4) |
Schedule
First round
October 30, 2022 | #3 Notre Dame | 1–1 (a.e.t.) (5–4 p) | #6 Pittsburgh | Notre Dame, Indiana |
6:00 p.m. EDT |
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Report |
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Stadium: Alumni Stadium Attendance: 428 Referee: John McCloskey Assistant referees: Erin Patterson Peter Charpentier Fourth official: Joshua Overmyer |
Penalties | ||||
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October 30, 2022 | #4 Virginia | 1–2 | #5 Duke | Charlottesville, Virginia |
8:00 p.m. EDT |
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Report |
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Stadium: Klöckner Stadium Attendance: 691 Referee: Carmen Serbio Assistant referees: William Aten Matthew Richardson Fourth official: Otto Leon |
Semifinals
November 3, 2022 | #1 North Carolina | 0–0 (a.e.t.) (7–6 p) | #5 Duke | Cary, North Carolina |
5:30 p.m. EDT |
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Report |
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Stadium: WakeMed Soccer Park Attendance: 691 |
Penalties | ||||
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November 3, 2022 | #2 Florida State | 3–3 (a.e.t.) (4–2 p) | #3 Notre Dame | Cary, North Carolina |
8:00 p.m. EDT |
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Report |
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Stadium: WakeMed Soccer Park Attendance: 2,686 |
Penalties | ||||
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Final
November 6, 2022 | #1 North Carolina | 1–2 | #2 Florida State | Cary, North Carolina |
12:00 p.m. EST |
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Report |
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Stadium: WakeMed Soccer Park Attendance: 3,879 Referee: Nicole Green Assistant referees: Erika Barahona Mandy Love Fourth official: Emma Richards |
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Statistics
Goalscorers
There were 14 goals scored in 5 matches, for an average of 2.8 goals per match.
3 goals
Korbin Albert – Notre Dame
1 goal
Michelle Cooper – Duke
Kat Rader – Duke
Emma Bissell – Florida State
Jody Brown – Florida State
Jenna Nighswonger – Florida State
Heather Payne – Florida State
Clara Robbins – Florida State
Avery Patterson – North Carolina
Kiki Van Zanten – Notre Dame
Katie Zaliski – Pittsburgh
Alexa Spaanstra – Virginia
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All-Tournament team
MVP in bold
Source:[6]
References
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