Syracuse field hockey’s Ange Bradley named National Coach of the Year
Katherine Sotelo | Web Designer
Syracuse head coach Ange Bradley was named National Coach of the Year by the National Field Hockey Coaches Association, it announced Friday.
The award comes after Bradley led the Orange to the program’s first national championship this season, the first national title for a women’s team in school history. SU started the season 16-0 but lost to North Carolina in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament final. The Orange then defeated the Tar Heels 4-2 in the national championship.
This is the second time Bradley’s been named coach of the year. She won her first in 2008, her second year at Syracuse, when the Orange went 22-2 and appeared in its first-ever national semifinal. She’s also a seven-time conference coach of the year, owns the sixth-best winning percentage in Division-I history (.751) and ranks fourth among active coaches.
Since Bradley’s hiring in 2007, the Orange has appeared in four final fours, back-to-back national championship games and, this season, won its first regular season ACC title since joining the league in 2013.
While Bradley was named ACC coach of the year, SU became the first team since 1994 to sweep the ACC awards. Alma Fenne won Offensive Player of the Year; Alyssa Manley, Defensive Player of the Year; Roos Weers, Rookie of the Year.
The Orange ranked second nationally in scoring margin (2.75), fourth in goals-against average (0.98), fifth in goals per game (3.82) and fifth in scoring average (3.73).
Published on January 8, 2016 at 2:03 pm
Contact Sam: sjfortie@syr.edu | @Sam4TR
Related Stories
- How Ange Bradley finally got the national title she's been chasing for 25 years
- Syracuse field hockey becomes 1st women's team in school history to win national championship
- Alyssa Manley wins Honda Award as nation's top field hockey player
- Alma Fenne leads scoring for No. 1 Syracuse in first and final season with team
- Roos Weers deals with dyslexia, transition to U.S. in becoming star at Syracuse