UMBC: Home Field Advantage

Published: Nov 13, 2014

Home Field Advantage

Energized by Retriever fans, Men’s Soccer prepares for America East championship game.

On November 15, the UMBC men’s soccer team will host Hartford for the America East Conference championship and an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. A victory would mark UMBC’s fourth invitation to the NCAA Tournament in five years, and Coach Pete Caringi’s crew would become just the second program in America East history to win the league’s regular season and tournament titles in back-to-back seasons.

The excitement on campus is palpable. Fans fill Retriever Soccer Park for home games and stadiums on the road. UMBC men’s soccer consistently ranks among the top 25 NCAA Division I teams in home game attendance.

The crowd exploded during UMBC’s November 12 America East semifinal tournament game against Vermont when forward Kay Banjo, the league’s Striker of the Year, broke a 1-1 deadlock with a phenomenal back-heel goal. Banjo’s story exemplifies the impact fans have on the game — how the support our student-athletes feel from the UMBC community makes a difference for them on the field.

Faced with the elimination of Towson’s men’s soccer program in 2013, Banjo ’15, media and communication studies, had to decide how to use his final year of collegiate eligibility. Considering his options, he remembered the fan support he saw at Retriever Soccer Park when he attended a contest there in 2013, and this year he is competing for the Retrievers. UMBC, he told The Baltimore Sun, “fits like a glove.”

At the core of “Retriever Fever” is Lot 17, named for the old moniker of the Stadium Lot, where fans have historically gathered before and after the games. Lot 17 members make their presence known with gold t-shirts, chants, flags, a beating drum, and unbridled enthusiasm for UMBC.

Lot 17 President Zach Trout ‘15, business technology administration, is plugged into the country’s rapidly growing passion for soccer. He shares, “My main goal is to grow Lot 17 so future students can experience the feeling of attending a professional soccer game right here at UMBC.”

For Retriever fan Margaret Glassman ’16, management of aging services, Lot 17 is about making lifelong friends and memories. She says, “It was great to find a group of people that love watching soccer as much as I do, and I think it definitely gives UMBC a home field advantage.”

Ben Alkon ‘16, history, agrees, saying, “UMBC has a diverse student body culturally as well as socially. If there’s something a student likes to do, I’d bet there are other students at UMBC with the same passion.” For Alkon, that group is Lot 17.

Athletic Director Tim Hall invites everyone in the UMBC community to attend the America East Conference Championship game on Saturday, November 15, 7 p.m. at the Retriever Soccer Park. The first 100 students with UMBC ID will be
admitted free.

“From experience I know for a fact that fans give the team a home field advantage,” says Lot 17’s Trout. “I want to make sure any away team knows this is UMBC and they are in our house.”

For tickets and more information, visit www.umbcretrievers.com. The game will also stream live online
at www.umbcretrievers.tv.

(11/13/2014)

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