Sports 8A Thursday, May 14, 2020 Th e Observer EOU women’s soccer adds 14 players to roster By Ronald Bond The Observer LA GRANDE — The Eastern Oregon University women’s soccer team made its deepest playoff run ever last season, and has seven starters back from the team that reached the national quarterfi nals and fi nished 10th in the nation. That has not stopped Mountaineers head coach Jacob Plocher from loading up on recruits in an effort to help push the program one step closer to being a national title contender. Plocher signed 14 ath- letes in the Class of 2020, eight of whom are colle- giate transfers. “We as a staff defi nitely feel this is probably one of the deepest recruiting classes we brought in,” Plocher said. “We really like the potential with this group.” The coach, who already holds the program mark for career wins as he enters his fourth season and has guided Eastern to the playoffs each of the last three years, also added six incoming freshmen to his roster. EOU graduated just fi ve seniors and lost one to transfer, but the large incoming class fi gures to create greater competi- tion within the team and to build for beyond 2020, as the team will have eight seniors this upcoming season. “There’s a lot of ver- satility, which has been a theme of what we look for,” Plocher said. “I’m really looking forward to the competition this fall. It’s going to be intense.” Of the transfers, Plocher brought in two players from Division I schools, adding Washington State University transfer Allison Rader, a midfi elder and Contributed photo Kiara Fontanilla, a Division I transfer from Cal State Fullerton, is among 14 signees by the Eastern Oregon University women’s soccer team. defender, and Cal State Fullerton goalkeeper Kiara Fontanilla. Neither D-I transfer saw the pitch during their time at their previous schools. Rader wasn’t a part of the WSU soccer program but had a decorated high school career and was playing semi-pro in Washington, according to Plocher, and Fontanilla was a backup goalkeeper for the Titans but didn’t play in 2019. Still, he is excited about what they can bring. “Being around that environment and how things are run at different programs, they know what it is going to take,” he said. “We don’t necessarily put a big emphasis on where you come from, what you’ve done in the past. We want you to buy in.” Additionally, EOU pulled in Haley Leavens, a Division II transfer from Concordia Univer- sity. Leavens, a midfi elder, played 18 games as a freshman and started fi ve, tallying an assist and regis- tering nine shots, including fi ve on goal. Plocher also signed some of the top players from the Northwest Ath- letic Conference from last season, including West Region MVP Hannah Jen- kins, a defender from Highline Community College. “The biggest thing is obviously with losing Josee (Bassett) on the back line those are impos- sible shoes to fi ll,” he said. “(Jenkins) brings another element that is going to help our back line and help our program as a whole be competitive.” Jenkins had a goal and two assists but, more important, helped anchor a defense that surrendered just six goals in 19 games for unbeaten Highline as it won the NWAC title. The Highline defense logged 14 shutouts, including a stretch late in the season of seven in a row. He also landed NWAC all-stars Gretta Wiersma, a midfi elder from Wenatchee Valley Community Col- lege, and Walla Walla Community College for- ward Taylen Wohl, who also was an all-star in the NWAC. Wohl was among the most prolifi c goal-scorers in the NWAC last fall, reg- istering 14 goals, which was the fourth-highest total in the conference, and scoring on nearly 61% of her shots on goal. Wiersma added a pair of goals from her midfi eld position. Brianna Krygier, a goalkeeper from Spokane Community College, and Corynn Vigil, a midfi elder from Yakima Valley, were also scooped up by Plocher. Vigil, also an NWAC all-star, had 12 goals, tied for sixth in the NWAC, and two assists, and scored on 44% of her shots on goal. Krygier allowed 11 goals in 10 games in net for Spokane but had 50 saves for a save percentage of 82%. Plocher added six high school seniors from across the West, including Alaska Rush Soccer Club team- mates Kasey Johnson and Kana Mateaki. Johnson is a defender/midfi elder from South Anchorage High School, and Mateaki comes from Dimond High School, also in Anchorage. Mateaki is a player Plocher thinks could have an immediate impact out of high school despite being the shortest player among the recruits at 5 foot even. “I love those girls who have a chip on their shoulder and want to come out and prove (critics) wrong,” Plocher said. Joining them are Idaho standout defender/mid- fi elders Kody Epp, from Eagle High School in Boise, and Darby McDe- vitt, from Lakeland High School in Rathdrum; from California, Santa Barbara High School utility player Mikayla Thoits; and from Washington, Marysville Pilchuck High School for- ward/defender Mackensie Connelly. Office of Research Public Notice: Special Test Market An industry leader in digital hearing devices has asked our Office of Research to hold a special product test event in your area. Thanks to years of research and advancements in hearing aid technology, we now know that the majority of people affected by a hearing loss can again enjoy a world of sound. 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