No. 18 Kansas to Collide with TCU Sunday

Game 12: Kansas at TCU
Time 1 p.m. (CT)
Location Fort Worth, Texas
Stadium Garvey-Rosenthal Stadium (1,500)
Series Tied, 1-1-0
Television Fox Sports Southwest +
Radio Jayhawk Radio Network
Online: KUAthletic.com/Radio
Webstream GoFrogs.com ($)
Live Stats KU-TCU Stats
Notes Kansas
TCU
Big 12 Conference
Stats at a Glance KU TCU
Record 10-1-0 7-3-1
Goals/GM 2.18 1.55
Goals Allowed/GM 0.45 0.82
Shots/GM 13.1 13.6
Shot % .167 .113
Shot on Goal % .424 .407
Saves/GM 4.1 4.8
Save % .900 .855
Fls/GM 10.9 9.5
YC-RC 10-0 14-1

Match Notes

LAWRENCE, Kan. – The Kansas soccer team will look to complete a perfect opening weekend of Big 12 play when it goes up against the TCU Horned Frogs inside Garvey-Rosenthal Stadium on Sunday, Sept. 28. The Jayhawks, who are coming off a 1-0 shutout of Baylor on Friday night, will hit the pitch for a 1 p.m., kickoff against the Horned Frogs. The match will be televised on Fox Sports Southwest Plus.
 
Over the Airwaves
Fans will be able to follow the Jayhawks in every match this year by listening to the free, live radio broadcast via leanStream on KUAthletics.com. To listen to Derek Johnson’s call, fans can visit the free online player located at KUAthletics.com/Radio.
 
About the Jayhawks
Kansas, who is ranked among the top-25 in the majority of the national collegiate polls, is coming of its most successful showing in non-conference play since 2004, going 9-1-0 over its opening 10 matches of 2014. Kansas has amassed a goal differential of +19 so far this season and has allowed just one goal in its last 560 minutes of play.
 
Junior Liana Salazar leads the squad with her eight goals. The mark leads the Big 12, as do her 17 points. Three other Jayhawks have tallied three or more goals. The Jayhawk offense has netted 24 goals and is tallying over 13 shots per game. Kansas’ 24 goals are the most through the first 11 games of a season since 2008. KU is averaging just under six shots on goal per game and is managing to get almost 40 percent of those to the back of the net. Kansas attacks through several players, as nine different Jayhawks have notched at least one goal this year and 15 different players have managed to tally two or more shots on the year.
 
The KU defense has been stout in its 11 outings, allowing just five goals and limiting its opponents to just under 11 shots per match. Senior goalkeeper Kaitlyn Stroud has posted a 0.39 goals against average in 10 games between the posts with the help of a league-leading .915 save percentage. Kansas has yet to allow more than one goal in a game this season.
 
About the TCU
After starting out the year with three losses in its first four games, TCU is unbeaten in its last seven outings, which includes a 0-0 draw with No. 13 West Virginia Friday night in Fort Worth. The Horned Frogs have allowed just two goals during their seven game unbeaten streak and have netted 14 goals in that same span.
 
TCU has scored 17 total goals this year which includes eight goals that have come within its last four games. The Horned Frogs are notching over 13 shots per game and putting over 40 percent of those on frame. Freshmen forwards Emma Heckendorn and Kela Gray lead the squad with four goals apiece, however they are two of five Horned Frogs who have tallied at least two goals this season.
 
The TCU defense has allowed nine opponent goals in 2014, and has held five of its last seven opponents scoreless. TCU opponents have posted over 14 shots per match, including under six shots on goal per game. Senior goalkeeper Vittoria Arnold, who has played all but one of her team’s matches in goal this year, has made 42 saves and notched six shutouts. Arnold has stopped over 87 percent of the shots put on frame thus far in 2014 and is allowing 0.59 goals per 90 minutes.
 
Eric Bell is in his third season as the head coach at TCU. The Horned Frogs are 20-23-8 during his tenure. Prior to coming to TCU, Bell spent the previous six seasons with the Florida State Seminoles. After arriving as an assistant coach in 2006, he was promoted to associate head coach in 2008. Bell also served as head coach at Indiana University of Pennsylvania in 2000 in addition to being an assistant at the University of Illinois and Ashland University in Ohio.
 
Starting Big 12 Play with a Bang
In the 15 years Mark Francis has coached at Kansas, the Jayhawks have seen some success in the opening weekends of conference play. Kansas has amassed a record of 8-4-1 (.607) in Big 12 home openers under Francis, an over 10 percent increase from its overall conference winning percentage of .486 since 1999. The Jayhawks hold a record of 3-9-3 (.300) in those Big 12 openers played on the road. Under Francis, Kansas is 5-8-2 in all Big 12 opening matches. Last season, Kansas opened its conference slate with a 0-0 draw at Iowa State.
 
First to Score, Wins Galore
Over its past 51 games, dating back to the beginning of the 2012 season, Kansas has developed an interesting trend when it comes to which team tallies the first goal of the match. During that 51-game span, the Jayhawks have been on the losing end only once in the games which they have put in the match’s first goal. Kansas has amassed a record of 27-1-2 in those games, which includes a 10-0-0 mark this year.
 
On the flip side, KU hasn’t been quite as fortunate when its opponents have gotten on the board first. Kansas has not won a game in that same 50-game span when finding itself trailing 1-0 at any point in a match. The Jayhawks are 0-19-1 in those games over the last two years, including an 0-1-0 mark this year.
 
RPI Review
With the release of the season’s first Ratings Percentage Index (RPI) report by the NCAA this week, several good signs stick out for the Jayhawks. Kansas checked in at No. 29 on the list that takes numerous factors into account including strength of schedule, record against top-50 teams and home versus road record. The ranking was Kansas’ highest to start the year since the weekly RPI report became public in 2011.
 
This week’s report shows that the Big 12 is among the nation’s toughest conferences after the conclusion of non-conference play. The league tallied the third-highest ranking in the week’s RPI and boasts five of its nine teams inside the top-50. The conference’s high ranking also means the Jayhawks will get plenty of chances to up their national standing as seven of their next eight contests will be against teams currently ranked inside the top-100 of the RPI.
 
Kansas’ debut among the top-30 of the first RPI also bodes well for the Jayhawks as 82 of the 90 teams that have been among the top-30 of the first RPI report over the last three seasons have gone on to advance to the NCAA Tournament.
 
Fast Freshman
Freshman Hannah Lukinac put in the first goal of her young KU career in the 44th minute against St. Mary’s on Sept. 21. The goal, which Lukinac scored after having logged just 35 minutes of playing time this season, made her the sixth-fastest Jayhawk to score the first of her collegiate career. Lukinac joined current teammate Jamie Fletcher on the prestigious list. Fletcher netted her first goal in a program record 13:18 into her playing career back in 2011.
 
Lukinac also joined rare company as she is just the seventh Jayhawk in program history to tally her first goal on her first career shot.
 
Kansas’ Historic Start
The 2014 Jayhawks got out to the program’s best start with a 8-0-0 record. The 2004 KU team held the previous program best when it began its year 6-0. The Jayhawks’ strong start can be attributed to impressive showings on both the offensive and defensive ends of the field. Kansas has already amassed a goal differential of +19, the squad’s highest after 11 games ever. KU’s 24 goals are also the most after 11 game since the 2008 squad netted 26 goals in its first 11 contests.
 
On defense, Kansas has conceded just five goals, and has shutout five of its last six opponents. KU’s 0.45 goals-against average is the program’s second-lowest after 11 games ever and ranks 20th in the NCAA. The Jayhawks have allowed only one opponent goal in the first half of play this season.
 
An NCAA Tourney This Way Comes?
Not only did the Jayhawks’ perfect start shoot them up the conference and national rankings, but it also greatly increased their chances of earning a spot in their first NCAA Tournament since 2011. Since the 2008 season, 21 NCAA teams have begun their seasons with a perfect 8-0-0 record in their first eight games. Of those 21 teams, 18 went on to earn bids into the NCAA Tournament. Of those 18 squads that earned NCAA tourney spots, half of them managed to advance all the way to the Sweet 16.
 
Past Kansas teams who have had similar strong starts have also trended toward postseason play. KU’s first NCAA squad, the 2001 team, won seven of its first nine matches and eventually won a then-program best 13 games. Both the 2003 and 2004 teams were victorious in eight of their first nine games and, not only made it to the postseason tournament, but advanced to the Sweet 16 and second round, respectively.
 
Let’s Get Defensive
While the Jayhawk offense has been as potent as the program has seen in some time, the defense has been just as impressive. Coming off five shutouts in its last six outings, Kansas is currently boasting a goals-against average of 0.45, the lowest in the Big 12 and the 20th-best mark in the nation. The Jayhawks have allowed just five goals on the year and no more than one in a game. KU went 299 minutes without conceding a goal from Sept. 5-Sept. 19, the 10th-longest streak in school history.
 
Kansas opponents’ lack of goal scoring may be attributed to the Jayhawks’ ability to keep the opposing team’s shot percentage low. Of the 119 shots KU has allowed this season, opponents are putting just 42 percent of those on target and only getting less than 11 percent of those shots on frame past goalkeeper Kaitlyn Stroud and into the back of the net.
 
Clutch Jayhawks
KU has seen numerous instances of late-game heroics already this year. Of the 23 goals Kansas has scored this season, nine of them have come within the final 20 minutes of play.  Four KU game-winning goals have also come within the final 20 minutes of action, including Liana Salazar’s golden goal in the 102 minute versus Colorado (9/5).
 
Speaking of game-winners, a total of seven different Jayhawks have already posted at least one game-winning goal this season. Only twice over the last nine seasons has a KU squad seen more than six players net at least one game-winner in a year.
 
Caution…Jayhawks Ahead
Through its first 11 games this season, Kansas has proven itself to be an aggressive squad in terms of fouls and cautions. The Jayhawks have been whistled for 120 fouls in 2014, which equates to just under 11 fouls per match. That mark is the highest among Big 12 teams this year and is the highest average by a Kansas team in four seasons.
 
KU has also become quite familiar with the referee’s yellow card this season as the Jayhawks have been already been cautioned on 10 different occasions. This total is a stark contrast from recent Kansas squads. During the 2012 and 2013 seasons, Kansas was shown yellow just 16 times, which included KU earning only one yellow throughout the entire 2012 campaign.
 
While this aggressive style of play may worry some, it has boded well for past Kansas squads. Four of the five Kansas teams that have advanced to the NCAA Tournament averaged 10.5 or more fouls per match and were each carded at least 12 times during their seasons.
 
Playing with the Lead
In last Friday’s loss to Marquette, the Jayhawks found themselves trailing in a match for the first time this season. Prior to Marquette’s go-ahead goal, KU amassed 739-straight minutes of “trail-less” play, which marked the longest streak of its kind in program history. The Jayhawks topped the 2004 team’s previous record by one minute.
 
The previous streak belonged to the 2004 squad that went nearly a month without trailing, racking up 738-consecutive minutes of trail-less play. That 2004 team also had a streak of 566 minutes to start that season.
 
Spreading the Wealth
The Kansas offense has shown that it could be a tough assignment for opposing defenses this year after a host of Jayhawks have made their presence known on the stat sheet. Twelve different Jayhawks have had their hand in at least one of the Jayhawks’ 23 goals thus far in 2014, either scoring or assisting. Seven additional players have managed to tally at least one shot. While Salazar has notched nearly a quarter of the team’s total shots (34), no other Jayhawk has taken more than 12 percent of the team’s total shots (139) thus far. Eighteen players have combined for the remaining 105 shots.
 
A year ago, the KU offense was slightly more one sided as only three different players had combined for more than half of the team’s shots after the opening 10 matches.
 
This Day in Kansas Soccer History
SEPTEMBER 28, 2008 – The Jayhawk soccer team picked up its first conference win of the year with its come-from-behind win at Iowa State in 2008. The Cyclones put in the game’s first goal in the 10th minute but Kansas went on to put in the next three goals and outlast the Cyclones by a score of 3-2. Twenty-two Jayhawks saw action in the match and outshot ISU by a tally of 22-14.
 
Kansas to Return to Rock Chalk Park on Oct. 3
After evaluating field conditions, Kansas officials announced Aug. 26 that the soccer team will look to resume playing games at Rock Chalk Park no later than the Jayhawks’ Big 12 opener versus Oklahoma State on Oct. 3.
 
After playing on the new surface on Aug. 22 against Wyoming, Kansas coaches and administrators deemed the field to be unsafe for play due to the uneven surface and several areas with little or no turf growth. The subsequent game on Aug. 24 against SMU was then moved to KU’s former game field, the Jayhawk Soccer Complex, which is where the team will remain for the rest of its home non-conference schedule.
 
The poor field conditions at Rock Chalk Park were attributed to an absence of weather conditions that facilitate the best environment for Bermuda turf growth. When weighing the field installation options over a year ago with turf experts, it was determined the best option for the long-term wellness of the field would be to sprig, or plant, the Bermuda grass seedlings instead of sodding the field. This decision was made with the knowledge that young Bermuda grass would thrive during a normally hot Kansas summer.
 
However, the average high temperature in July and August this year was just over 87 degrees prior to last week, much cooler than the 91-degree average high for this area during those months. Despite numerous efforts to facilitate faster growth, the unusual weather patterns left the surface behind schedule and unfit for play at the start of the season.
 
Up Next
Kansas will return to Lawrence to host its much-anticipated Big 12 home opener at Rock Chalk Park on Friday, Oct. 3. The Jayhawks will welcome the Oklahoma State Cowgirls to their new, state-of-the-art facility for a 7 p.m. kickoff. Two days later, Kansas will return to the pitch at Rock Chalk Park to take on their final non-conference opponent of the regular season, the Missouri State Bears. KU and MSU will kickoff at 1 p.m. in the match to be televised on Time Warner Cable SportsChannel and ESPN3.