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CIS mens soccer: Trinity Westerns Hamilton named season MVP
LANGLEY, B.C. (CIS) – Fourth-year Trinity Western defender
Paul Hamilton was named Canadian Interuniversity Sport player of
the year in men’s soccer, Wednesday evening.
The Calgary native became the second Spartan to receive the Joe
Johnson memorial trophy since TWU joined CIS in 2001. Midfielder
Nick Perugini was honoured in 2007.
Other CIS major award winners announced during the All-Canadian
Banquet were Guelph’s Robert Murphy of Ottawa, who was named
rookie of the year, Saint Mary’s Guiseppe Scichilone of
Gondola Point, N. B., who received the Student-Athlete Community
Service award, and Laval’s Samir Ghrib, who earned the
coach-of-the-year award, presented by Coaches of Canada.
The 2009 CIS championship gets under way Thursday at Trinity
Western University in Langley, B.C. The national final is slated
for Sunday at 3:30 p.m. Pacific Time. SSN Canada will have live
webcasts of all main-bracket duels (www.ssncanada.ca or
www.cis-sic.ca).
JOE JOHNSON MEMORIAL TROPHY (player of the year): Paul
Hamilton, Trinity Western
In only three seasons in Langley, team captain Paul Hamilton has
already established himself as one of the best players in Spartans
history. The 6-foot-1, 172-pound defender was named to the first
all-Canadian team this fall following nominations to the second CIS
squad the past two years, and has been a Canada West first-team
all-star in each of his seasons at Trinity Western. He was selected
to the all-tournament team at the 2007 CIS championship, and again
in 2008 when the Spartans reached the national final.
Prior to his return out west, the Calgary native spent his first
CIS season at Cape Breton, capturing AUS rookie-of-the-year honours
and a spot on the second AUS squad.
In 2009, Hamilton led the Spartans to second place in the Canada
West standings with an 8-2-4 mark, helped TWU reach the top of the
national rankings for three weeks, and earn a fifth consecutive
trip to the CIS championship. The education student tied for the
team lead with 13 starts and played a team-high 1,245 minutes as
Trinity Western topped the conference with 25 goals scored and
finished third with 12 goals allowed in 14 games.
“Paul is the keystone to our backline. He is the emotional
and physical leader of our team,” said Spartans head coach
Pat Rohla. “He is our best tackler and is respected for his
ability to win challenges both on the ground and in the air. He is
consistent, reliable, and able to lead a line of defence like few
other players I have seen at the CIS level. I believe that Paul
continues to be one of the premier centre backs in the
nation.”
ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Robert Murphy, Guelph
A native of Ottawa, Murphy is the first Gryphon to be named CIS
rookie of the year in men’s soccer. He became the fourth
straight OUA player to claim the award.
The 6-foot, 170-pound centre forward led Guelph in scoring as a
freshman with five goals in 12 conference games en route to a
selection on the first OUA West all-star team. The marketing
management student had an immediate impact on the Gryphons, who,
following a 4-1-1 start to the season, were ranked nationally for
the first time in over a decade.
Murphy joined the Gryphons after playing for the Ottawa South
United of the men’s premier league and was a member of Team
Ontario (regional team) in 2002, 2003 and 2007. He comes from an
athletic family. His father played football for the University of
Ottawa, while two of his uncles played professional sports. Mike
Murphy was a member of the Ottawa Rough Riders and Frank Finnigan
played for the Ottawa Senators.
“Robbie has a fantastic work rate from the front and has
settled well into the pace of the OUA game in just his first
year,” said head coach Keith Mason. “His contribution
to the team and work rate is phenomenal. He helps the team by
defending hard from the front and has tremendous vision and brings
other players into play. He is a very worthy candidate for this
award.”
STUDENT-ATHLETE COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARD: Guiseppe
Scichilone, Saint Mary’s
Over his five years at Saint Mary’s, defender Guiseppe
Scichilone has been involved in numerous community activities and
school events, helped many causes and embodied the truest
definition of a student-athlete.
He is a lunch monitor for Excel Child Care Programming, a member of
the Conflict Resolution Society, has volunteered at the 65 Roses
for Cystic Fibrosis Run (2007, 2008, 2009) and at the virgin music
festival, is a member of the Saint Mary’s Athletes Council
(2007- present), and is an Intramural soccer coordinator at the
school. Last February, he travelled to Belfast, Northern Ireland,
to perform workshops to approximately 20 schools on conflict
resolution skills.
In the classroom, Scichilone has a GPA of 3.29 and was named an
Academic All-Canadian for 2008-2009. He has received many academic
awards including the Alumni Golf Tournament Bursary, Alumni
Leadership Award, Joseph E. Donahue Scholarship and Certificate of
Merit.
“Guiseppe is everything a coach could ask for, hard working,
dedicated, honest, always out for the benefit of the overall group
with less concern for himself,” said Saint Mary’s head
coach Stewart Galloway.
COACH OF THE YEAR, presented by Coaches of Canada: Samir
Ghrib, Laval
An assistant with Laval’s women’s soccer team at the
end of the 90’s, Ghrib is at the helm of the Rouge et Or men
since the rebirth of the program in 2000. Following a few learning
years, the Rouge et Or have become annual contenders under
Ghrib’s guidance, reaching the national final in 2007 and
advancing to the CIS championship for the fifth consecutive
campaign in 2009.
This season, Laval finished atop the Quebec regular season
standings for the first time in team history with an 8-2-2 mark
before claiming a second QSSF championship with a 3-0 gold-medal
win over McGill. Led by all-Canadians Gabriel Moreau on offence and
Alexandre Lévesque-Tremblay on defence, the Rouge et Or
topped the league in both goals scored (28) and allowed (8). After
stumbling out of the gate to a 1-2 start, they are undefeated in 11
games (9-0-2) heading into this week’s CIS tournament.
Ghrib is a well-respected figure in the soccer community both in
Quebec City and at the provincial level. Prior to taking over the
Laval program, he led Collège François-Xavier-Garneau
to three provincial championships, earning coach-of-the-year
honours for his work with the Élans in 1998. He has coached
a number of Quebec provincial teams, leading the Under-16 selection
to a gold medal at the 2004 national championship and the Under-15
side to silver in 2003.
“It is a well-deserved honour for Samir after all these years
of dedication and hard work,” said Gilles Lépine,
assistant director of the Rouge et Or varsity program. “Samir
is a dedicated and generous individual whose sole concern is the
success of those around him.”
ALL-CANADIAN
TEAMS
The all-Canadian teams were also announced on Wednesday, with
Montreal and Cape Breton contributing a pair apiece to the first
squad.
The 10 players joining Hamilton on the first CIS dream team are
Montreal goalkeeper Gerardo Argento of Montreal, Laval’s
Alexandre Lévesque-Tremblay of Baie-Saint-Paul, Que.,
UBC’s Graham Smith of Abbotsford, B.C., and Toronto’s
Yannis Gianniotis of Toronto on defence, York’s Francesco
Bruno of Toronto, Montreal’s Alhassane Fox of Conakry,
Guinea, Cape Breton’s Andrew Rigby of Nottingham, England,
and Dalhousie’s Ross Hagen of Calgary at midfield, as well as
Cape Breton’s Keishen Bean of Sandys, Bermuda, and
Victoria’s Cole McFarlane of Calgary at the striker
positions.
Many of them became or were already multiple all-Canadians.
Argento received his fifth nod in five varsity seasons, including
four first-team selections. Bruno, the CIS player of the year in
2008, was one of five players named CIS all-stars for the third
time along with Hamilton, Lévesque-Tremblay, Smith and
McFarlane. Bean was a second-team member a year ago.
The second CIS squad for 2009 is comprised of Laurentian keeper
Scott Cliff of Hanmer, Ont., York’s Franco Ruscetta of
Woodbridge, Ont., UPEI’s Nathan Snowie of Harrington, P.E.I.,
and UNB’s Ken Morrison of Fredericton on defence,
McGill’s Yohann Capolungo of Vallan, France,
Saskatchewan’s Josh Northey of Saskatoon, Moncton’s
Olivier Babineau of Dieppe, N.B., Ryerson’s Alex Braletic of
Thornhill, Ont., and Alberta’s Brett Colvin of Calgary at
midfield, as well as Laval’s Gabriel Moreau of St-Hyacinthe,
Que., and Trent’s Thaddeus Bolton of Bowmanville, Ont., as
the strikers.
Morrison was named a CIS all-star for the third straight year,
including a first-team nod in 2007. Babineau was a first-team
all-Canadian last season, while Colvin found a spot on the second
constellation for a second consecutive campaign.
2009 CIS MEN'S
SOCCER AWARDS & ALL-CANADIANS
Joe Johnson Memorial trophy (player of the year):
Paul Hamilton, Trinity Western
Rookie of the year:
Robert Murphy, Guelph
Student-Athlete Community Service award:
Guiseppe Scichilone, Saint Mary’s
Coach of the year, presented by Coaches of
Canada:
Samir Ghrib, Laval
First Team
Position - Athlete - University - Year - Hometown -
Faculty
Goalkeeper Gerardo Argento Montreal 5 Montreal, Que. Law
Defender Paul Hamilton Trinity Western 4 Calgary, Alta.
Education
Defender Alexandre Lévesque-Tremblay Laval 5
Baie-Saint-Paul, Que. Law
Defender Graham Smith UBC 5 Abbotsford, B.C. Commerce
Defender Yannis Gianniotis Toronto 3 Toronto, Ont.
History/Geography
Midfield Francesco Bruno York 4 Toronto, Ont. Business &
Society
Midfield Alhassane Fox Montreal 2 Conakry, Guinea Criminology
Midfield Andrew Rigby Cape Breton 1 Nottingham, England BACS
Midfield Ross Hagen Dalhousie 4 Calgary, Alta. Commerce
Striker Keishen Bean Cape Breton 2 Sandys, Bermuda BACS
Striker Cole McFarlane Victoria 5 Calgary, Alta. Humanities
Second Team
Goalkeeper Scott Cliff Laurentian 5 Hanmer, Ont. Physical
Education
Defender Franco Ruscetta York 5 Woodbridge, Ont. Business
Defender Nathan Snowie UPEI 3 Harrington, P.E.I. Business
Administration
Defender Ken Morrison UNB 5 Fredericton, N.B Kinesiology
Midfield Yohann Capolungo McGill 2 Vallan, France Arts &
Science (Economics & Math)
Midfield Josh Northey Saskatchewan 3 Saskatoon, Sask. Arts &
Science
Midfield Olivier Babineau Moncton 4 Dieppe, N.B. Kinesiology
Midfield Alex Braletic Ryerson 2 Thornhill, Ont. Engineering
Midfield Brett Colvin Alberta 3 Calgary, Alta. Business
Striker Gabriel Moreau Laval 3 St-Hyacinthe, Que. Sciences
Striker Thaddeus Bolton Trent 4 Bowmanville, Ont. Business
Administration
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