Thanks to a
record-setting 2006 season, the Eclipse Select emerged as the top team in
the Soccer America Top 20 girls rankings, taking over the top spot from the
Dallas Texans.
2007 Soccer America's Top 20 Girls Clubs
RANK/TEAM (STATE)
1 Eclipse Select (Ill.)
2 Dallas Texans (Texas)
3 PDA (N.J.)
4 Michigan Hawks (Mich.)
5 Slammers FC (Calif.)
6 Colorado Rush (Colo.)
7 Mustang Soccer (Calif.)
8 St. Louis SC (Mo.)
9 Edmond SC (Okla.)
10 So Cal Blues (Calif.)
11 Real Colorado (Colo.)
12 Freestate SA (Md.)
13 Bethesda SC (Md.)
14 Real So Cal (Calif.)
15 San Diego Surf (Calif.)
16 Eagles SC (Calif.)
17 Pleasanton Rage (Calif.)
18 World Class (N.J.)
19 Laguna Hills Eclipse (Calif.)
20 Irvine Strikers SC (Calif.)
Criteria
Soccer America selects the top 20 clubs, based on success of their teams in
national youth championships over the last three years and national
recognition for players (including U.S. national youth team selection) from
these clubs in 2006.
1
ECLIPSE SELECT. The Chicago area club moved into the top spot on the
strength of an impressive run in the U.S. Youth Soccer National
Championships. Four Eclipse teams won regional titles. The U-17s and U-15s
returned home with national championships. The U-19s finished second, and
the U-18s lost out on a berth in their division's final when they fell in a
shootout. Eclipse alums include 2006 Freshman of the Year Michele
Weissenhofer from Notre Dame. Rising Star: Sophomore Brianne Rodriguez, one
of the country's top young setup players.
2
DALLAS TEXANS. Like the Texans boys, the girls rank second in the
nation. In 2006, the U-18 Texans Red North won a USYS national championship,
and two other Texans girls team finished third at the nationals in Iowa. The
Texans will be strong again in 2007. The U-18s and U-17s won their Showcase
divisions at the Disney's Soccer Showcase, and they along with the U-16s and
U-14s won Region III Premier League titles. Rising Star: Defender Alina
Garciamendez played for the U.S. U-15s at the
Nike Friendlies.
3
PDA. The New Jersey club has dominated the Region I championships,
winning nine championships over the last three years. A team to watch is the
U-15 Fire, winner of its Showcase division at January's Disney's Soccer
Showcase. PDA produced quite a 1-2 punch in Women's College Player of the
Year Heather O'Reilly and All-Freshman pick Tobin Heath, who helped North
Carolina win the 2006 NCAA Division I title. Rising Star: Pennsylvanian
Shannon Roche, who attended last year's U-14 national team girls megacamp.
4
MICHIGAN HAWKS. The Hawks team up with the Wolves' boys program to
form one of the Midwest's best clubs. Six gold stars appear within the
Wolves-Hawks crest; each star represents one of the USYS National
Championships 97 including four girls titles, the most recent in 2004. At
last fall's Michigan state championships, the Hawks won four age groups and
finished second in the other two. Rising Stars: Defender Victoria Bailey and
forward Kelsey Kassab were both called into under-15 national team camps.
5
SLAMMERS FC. Once again, the Newport Beach club is the top ranked
club from the girls soccer hotbed of Southern California. The Slammers won
the U-16 Super Group at U.S. Club Soccer's 2006 National Cup V
Championships, giving them seven national titles over the last five years
and U.S. Club Soccer championships in each of the last three seasons. In
January, four Slammers were called into the U-17 national team camp. Rising
Star: U-17 selection Charney Burke scored in the U-16 Slammers' Super Group
championship victory.
6
COLORADO RUSH. Any doubt about the Rush's strength was put to rest
last summer when it won the U-19 division at the U.S. Youth Soccer
Championships 97 its first title in five years after winning six
championship in 1998-2001. Rush products Ameera Abdullah (Florida) and
Jordan Angeli (Santa Clara) got called into the first women's U-21 camp of
2007. A team to watch is the Rush's U-17 squad, winner of six state titles
in seven years. Rising Star: Danielle Foxhoven represented the U.S. U-17s at
the first Women's Nike Friendlies.
7
MUSTANG SOCCER. Mustang won a USYS national championship in 2004 and
has arguably the best early-teen program in girls soccer-crazy Northern
California. The U-12 and U-13 girls teams fell in the 2006 Region IV finals
on penalty kicks. The program's director is former U.S. international John
Doyle. It includes 5,000 players. It has been developing the Tassajara
Soccer Complex, a $4.5 million complex and community center. Rising Stars:
Alexandra Conti and Kaitlyn Fitzpatrick, who attended the '06 U-14
Identification Camp.
8
ST. LOUIS SC. The former Busch Soccer Club has a long-established
reputation as one of the best boys and girls clubs in the country. Its most
recent youth title came in 2005 when the U-15 girls were crowned USYS
national teams. In 2006, Gary Miller's team lost on penalty kicks in the
U-16 regional final. Last fall, it won the U-17 state title, one of four
crowns captured by St. Louis SC teams. The club is directed by former NASL
and MISL player Steve Pecher. Rising Star: Maggi?Kistner scored for the U.S.
U-16s against Germany in March 2006.
9
EDMOND SC. The Oklahoma club moved into the Top 20 at No. 19 last
year and climbs 10 spots this year on the strength of its third straight
appearance in a USYS National Championship final 97 and the second
appearance in three years for Jimmy Hampton's ESC 9190 Black. Hampton's ESC
9191 Black team fell in the final of the 2005 U-14 division. Between them,
the 9190 and 9191 Edmond teams have captured 11 state championships. Rising
Star: Calli Cooper attended the 2006 ODP Thanksgiving Interregional 9191
Girls Camp.
10
SO CAL BLUES. The pioneering girls club won its second USYS national
title in 2005, capturing the U-14 championship. The Blues started out in
1990 when Larry Draluck began working with a group of girls from South
Orange County (San Juan Capistrano). Those girls were to form the foundation
of the first Blues youth teams. Tab Bobak, a Southern California youth
coaching legend, joined the program soon thereafter. Rising Star: Elizabeth
Eddy made the Region '92 team that traveled to Florida for the
Interregionals.
11
REAL COLORADO. Jamaican Lorne Donaldson, a former A-League head coach
and MLS assistant coach, has built Real Colorado into a national power. It
was the only team to win all four games at the 2006 USYA National
Championships, capturing the U-16 Masotto Cup. Real has had 17 seniors
verbally commit to D1 colleges. In 2007, Real Colorado will move its
tournaments to Dick's Sporting Goods Park, the new home of MLS's Colorado
Rapids. Rising Star: Jennifer Kmezich won the adidas Golden Boot at the U-16
nationals.
12
FREESTATE SA. The Freestate Shooters, part of Maryland's Freestate
Soccer Association, boast one of the greatest collections of talent in girls
soccer today. The Shooters, state champions in 2004 and runners-up in 2005
and 2006, feature three U.S. under-17 national team players. Goalie Yewande
Balogun, defender Julia Bouchelle and midfielder Christine Nairn all
represented the USA at the 2006 Nike Women's Friendlies. Rising Star:
Shooter Tiffany McCarty is a member of the U.S. U-16 national team player
pool.
13
BETHESDA SC.
The Maryland club has been a
steady producer of national talent for many years. After sending at least
one team to the USYSA National Championships for the last five years,
Bethesda ran into bad luck at the 2006 Region I championships. Three
Bethesda teams 97 the U-19 Excel, U-16 Rapids and U-15 Blast 97 reached the
finals, where they all lost by one-goal margins. Rising Star: Chante
Sandiford of the Rapids represented Region I at last fall's ODP Thanksgiving
Interregionals.
14
REAL SO CAL. No other Southern California club has teams ranked as
high in both the Boys and Girls Top 20s. Real So Cal won the 2004 U-18 USYS
national championship as So Cal United. RSC ranked No. 1 in the Super
Y-League's Girls First XI ahead of the Chicago Magic after claiming the U-15
girls title at the North American Championship. The boys and girls programs
have sent more than 170 players on to Division I colleges. Rising Star:
Caitlin Blosser was U-15 Girls MVP at the Super Y-League North American
Finals.
15
SAN DIEGO SURF. The Surf's string of six straight seasons with at
least one team in the USYS National Championships ended in 2006, but it came
close. The U-17s and U-16s both lost in the Region IV finals by 1-0 scores.
The Surf's U-18s also were state championships in 2006. The Surf is an
institution on the national youth scene, organizing the Surf Cup and Surf
Girls Cup, two of the most important girls tournaments. Rising Star: Elle
Magrassia, who scored a great overtime goal in the Cal South U-16 State Cup
final against the Eagles.
16
EAGLES SC. The Ventura County (Calif.) program makes its debut in the
Girls Top 20. Coach Vince Thomas led the Eagles to the 2004 U-14 USYS
national championship. The Eagles have 16 seniors headed off to Division I
women's programs next fall, including Nicole Sweetman, who will play for
perennial Women's College Cup finalist UCLA. They also have a flourishing
boys program that competes in the Coast Soccer League. Rising Star: Bianca
Burright, who made the U.S. U-15 girls national team in 2006.
17
PLEASANTON RAGE. The Rage is another Northern California powerhouse,
which produced one of the great teams of the last decade. It won the U-17
national championship in 2002 and the U-19 championship in 2004. The Rage's
best finish in 2006 was the U-15s' second-place finish at the Region IV
championships. Rising Stars: Madeline Fox, Jessica Rachel Clark, Carlee
Payne and Ahsha Smith all were picked to the Region IV team for the 2006
U.S. Youth Soccer ODP Thanksgiving Interregionals.
18
WORLD CLASS. The New Jersey club had three players 97 Nikki Krzysik,
Sheree Gray and Yael Averbuch 97 make the 2004 U.S. U-19 World Championship
team. Averbuch has gone on to lead North Carolina to the 2006 NCAA Division
I title and make the U.S. national team squad for the Four Nations
Tournament in China. Younger sister Shira Averbuch, 16, is a promising
player in the girls national team program. Rising Star: Defender Amber
Brooks is also a member of the U.S. under-16 girls national team.
19
LAGUNA HILLS ECLIPSE. Another powerhouse from Southern California's
Orange County, the Eclipse won national championships in 2002 (U-15s) and
2005 (U-18s). In 2006, the Eclipse United finished second in the Region IV
U-19 finals, and the Eclipse White was named the U-17 Coast Soccer League
Premier and California Premier champion. Its recent graduates include
University of Texas star Kasey Moore. Rising Star: Laura Cole, a high school
junior on the U-17 Eclipse White, attended the Thanksgiving Interregionals.
20
IRVINE STRIKERS SC. Better known for their boys program based in
Orange County (Calif.), the Strikers won their first US Youth Soccer
national championship in 2006 when they captured the U-14 title. Julie Mckee
and Makenna Henry won individual honors as the Strikers finished their run
with a 1-0 victory over the Hershey Attack in the final. Rising Stars:
Nicole De Puy and Natalia Ledezma are members of the Region IV 9192 team
that traveled to Florida over Thanksgiving for the USYS ODP competition.
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