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Bobcats Bring Valley’s Love for Soccer to a National Stage

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Bobcats Bring Valley’s Love for Soccer to a National Stage

By Jody Murray and Andrew Mitchell, UC Merced

November 21, 2024

The significance of soccer in the San Joaquin Valley cannot be overstated. It’s a sport that connects communities, bridges borders and stretches across generations of fathers and mothers and daughters and sons.

So it is fitting that the Valley’s youngest university has already established a strong presence in collegiate soccer at a coast-to-coast level. Both of UC Merced’s intercollegiate soccer teams are making return trips to national championship tournaments after stellar regular seasons.

Each team carries an impressive resume into the NAIA post-season. The women shut out eight of their last nine opponents; only four programs in the nation have a better goals-scored-against average than the Bobcats’ 0.40. The men, meanwhile, powered through their schedule without a loss, winning 12 games and tying three.

The women’s soccer team is 10-3-2 and sits 19th on an NAIA ranking based on record and schedule strength (RPI). The Bobcats’ stingy defense is led Katy Flores and Preeya Singh — both selected to the California Pacific Conference’s first team — along with goalkeeper Alicia Lepe. On the scoring side, Cal Pac Offensive Player of the Year Yareli Hernandez has nine goals and Yesenia Tijerina has 13.

“There is a ton of excitement around the athletic department and the women’s soccer program these days,” women’s head coach Roman DuChateau said. “To qualify for our second consecutive national tournament is a testament to these ladies and their hard work, dedication and relentless spirit. The entire community has rallied around this team and we feel all the love. We look forward to representing our university and our city with the spirit of Merced.”

“We are excited about our opportunity to represent our university and community on the national stage,” men’s head coach Albert Martins said. “This team has worked very hard to get to this point. While we have began playing teams to prepare for our transition to the NCAA, it has also prepared us to be our best this season.”


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Felicia Roberts took an idea gathered a few people to reached into a minority community to highlight the positive, using a minority newspaper the Central Valley Voice. Roberts was joined by her sisters Carolyn Williams, Alleashia Thomas, niece Hermonie Lynn Williams, nephew Ron Williams, cousin Jerald Lester, Jay Slaffey, Greg Savage, Tim Daniels and the late J Denise Fontaine. Each individual played an important role in the birth of the newspapers. Since, then many have stood strong behind the success of the newspapers and its goal to fill a void in the Central Valley community The Central Valley Voice published their 1st issue in November 1991. Its purposed was to highlight the achievements of minorities in the Central Valley. The Voice focuses on the accomplishments of African Americans and Hispanics giving young people role models while diminishing the stereotypical pictures of gangs, crime and violence that permeate the minority communities. Since 1991, the Central Valley Voice has provided an important voice for the minority community throughout the Madera, Merced. Stanislaus and San Joaquin counties.

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