Etiqueta: soccer

  • France prepares for Israel soccer match after violence in Amsterdam

    Paris, France – Thousands of extra police are being deployed in and around Paris ahead of Thursday’s France-Israel soccer match, a week after violence erupted on the streets of Amsterdam.

    Pro-Palestinian groups are urging France not to host an Israeli sports team while it is waging wars and deadly attacks in Gaza, the occupied West Bank and Lebanon, claiming similar measures have been taken against Russia over its massive invasion of Ukraine.

    Meanwhile, few people snapped up tickets for the match at the Stade de France, north of Paris, leading some to question the need for a large-scale police operation.

    Officials say security will be heavily beefed up at the match. Police officers will be deployed at the Stade de France and on public transport networks.

    The measures have been stepped up in part to prevent clashes like the one that broke out in Amsterdam, the Dutch capital, before and after a soccer match between Israel’s Maccabi Tel Aviv and Ajax of the Netherlands.

    Leopold Lambert, an editor and architect in the French capital, said: «The atmosphere in Paris, at least for people who have Palestine and football in mind, is a desire for strong solidarity action, which will probably have to take place outside the stadium given the huge police apparatus. «

    Pro-Palestinian protesters plan to gather in front of Saint-Denis City Hall, about a 20-minute walk from the stadium, on Thursday evening to voice their opposition to the match.

    «Israel’s involvement in sports, its involvement in everything else, is what they want us to stop talking about Gaza or genocide,» Nadim Smair, a Jordanian Palestinian restaurateur and event producer in Paris, told Al Jazeera.

    «Europe should censor Israeli athletes»

    French President Emmanuel Macron and Prime Minister Michel Barnier plan to attend Thursday’s match as «a message of brotherhood and solidarity following the intolerable acts of anti-Semitism that followed the match in Amsterdam this week,» Macron’s office said in a statement sent to AFP.

    His words echoed the sentiments of many Western leaders after the match in the Netherlands, calling the chaos in the Netherlands anti-Semitic while appearing to downplay any damage caused by Israeli soccer fans.

    On the eve of the match in Amsterdam, Israeli fans burned a Palestinian flag and destroyed a taxi. On the way to the match, videos showed Israeli fans chanting anti-Arab slogans. After the soccer match, people on scooters attacked Israeli fans and others threw fireworks at them. Five Israelis were hospitalized, and 20 to 30 were slightly injured.

    Other prominent political figures are also planning to watch the match, including former presidents Nicolas Sarkozy, Francois Hollande and former Senate president Gerard Larcher.

    «We all know what Macron’s position is [on Israel]in a sense, even though they move back and forth where they stand,” Smair said. «To be honest, the game that is happening in France and all the news around it is distracting from the reality in Gaza.»

    Lambert said that while Macron has made some «performative moves» regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, «none of those moves would lead us to think that he doesn’t fully support the genocidal siege. And going to the stadium just shows that even more.» «

    Sabine Agostini, a French-Lebanese cheerleader for the French national football team, believes the match should be cancelled.

    «First, for political reasons: Europe has censored Russian athletes and should do the same with Israeli athletes. And also for security reasons. «Football and sports in general convey positive values, which is not the case for this match,» she told Al Jazeera.

    It’s a shame that politics interferes with sports

    Of the 80,000 available seats at the Stade de France, only 20,000 tickets had been sold at the time of publication – the lowest attendance since the stadium opened.

    The previous worst attendance was 37,000 for a French team match against New Zealand in June 2003.

    Rodrigue Flahaut-Prevot, a Paris lawyer who holds season tickets to the Parc des Princes and Stade Velodrome in Marseille, said politics and sport must remain separate.

    “I am very much in favor of respecting the law and today, like all citizens, I deplore the fact that one community is attacking another. Above all, I find it sad that this issue has become politicized,» said Flahaut-Prevotova. «In France, secularism means keeping religion out of the public sphere…political debate should be the same, excluded from sports.»

    The violence in Amsterdam was the exception rather than the norm for football fans, he believed.

    «If we don’t incite hatred between communities, I think people can live completely peacefully, especially in stadiums. Because it’s just a sport. And it’s a shame that politics interferes with sports.»

    According to Paris police prefect Laurent Nunez, 4,000 police are expected to be mobilized for the match between France and Israel, compared to the usual 1,200-1,300 when the stadium is sold out.

    Israeli authorities advised fans against attending the game in France and warned Israelis abroad against wearing recognizable Israeli or Jewish symbols.

    MPs from the left-wing France Unbowed (LFI) party, which sympathizes with the suffering of Palestinians, joined the calls for a boycott.

    «This game is being actively boycotted and many of us, despite our love of football, will not be watching it,» Lambert said.

    Global opposition to Israel’s genocide of Palestinians in Gaza is increasingly visible at football events.

    Last week, Paris Saint-Germain fans unfurled a «Free Palestine» banner during a Champions League match at the Parc des Princes stadium. French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau criticized the move, saying the banner «has no place in the stadium».

    #France #prepares #Israel #soccer #match #violence #Amsterdam

  • Amsterdam warns of new calls for riots after violence surrounding Israeli soccer match

    A senior police official warned on Tuesday of calls for more riots in Amsterdam after dozens of people armed with sticks and firecrackers set fire to a tram on Monday night, with the city grappling with tensions following last week’s violence targeting fans Israeli football club.

    Olivier Dutilh of the Amsterdam police told a court hearing that «we have indications that there are calls for similar» riots in the west of the city.

    The streets in the area were relatively quiet in the evening, and the security presence was modest.

    Israeli soccer fans clash with Dutch youth on the streets of Amsterdam after a soccer match on November 8, 2024. X/iAnnet via REUTERS

    Amsterdam’s mayor, police chief and attorney general released a report on Monday describing what happened last week, including new details about the actions of Maccabi Tel Aviv fans before the Maccabi Tel Aviv-Ajax soccer match.

    Local authorities have not decided to ban the game, but have stepped up security. Local authorities banned pro-Palestinian demonstrators from gathering outside the stadium.

    The day before the game, authorities reported incidents and saw social media posts threatening Maccabi fans.

    Around midnight, Israeli fans tore down a Palestinian flag from a building in the city center, several took off their seat belts and attacked a taxi, the document said.

    Taxi drivers tried to mobilize online in response, focusing on a casino where about 400 Israeli fans had gathered. The police mobilized to avoid a major confrontation.

    On the morning of the match, the authorities were «particularly concerned about Maccabi fans and the response of taxi drivers,» the document says.

    Anti-Israel protesters walk towards a police line near a soccer stadium in Amsterdam on November 7, 2024. AP

    Amsterdam mayor Femke Halsema asked the Israeli ambassador to explain to officials in Israel «that it is a sporting event and should not be mixed with politics.»

    In the afternoon, posts on social networks intensified and anti-Semitic terms were used.

    After Ajax’s 5-0 win over Maccabi, parts of a large group of Maccabi fans «run around with sticks and destroy things,» the document says.

    There were also «rioters who moved in small groups, on foot, on scooters or in cars, and quickly attacked Maccabi fans before disappearing,» according to the City Hall timeline.

    Amsterdam mayor Femke Halsema asked the Israeli ambassador to explain to officials in Israel «that it is a sporting event and should not be mixed with politics.» AFP via Getty Images
    People celebrate as Maccabi fans from Tel Aviv arrive at Ben Gurion International Airport in Lod, Israel on November 8, 2024. Reuters

    The police chief said that these incidents had an «anti-Semitic character – there is talk of hunting Jews and people are asked about their nationality.» Then there were rumors of missing people and hostage taking, which turned out to be unfounded.

    Police said the fire was quickly extinguished Monday and riot police cleared the square. Images online show people damaging property and setting off firecrackers.

    A police vehicle later caught fire in a nearby street, and police said they suspected arson.

    Police said it was unclear who started the riots and whether they were connected to what happened last week. Some of the rioters could be heard on videos shared on social media insulting Jews.

    Police said they had detained three suspects and appealed for witnesses, including an attack on a cyclist who was beaten as he drove past the riots.

    The police noticed the tense atmosphere in the city, as on Thursday after the soccer match, five people were treated in the hospital, and several dozen were detained.

    According to Amsterdam’s mayor, youths on scooters and on foot went in search of Israeli fans, punched and kicked them, and then ran to avoid the police.

    Prime Minister Dick Schoof met members of Amsterdam’s Jewish community on Tuesday to discuss anti-Semitism following the violence.

    Police arrested a man near Dam Square after hundreds of people protested on November 10, 2024. Hollandse Hoogte/Shutterstock

    Reports of anti-Semitic speech, vandalism and violence have been on the rise in Europe since the start of the Gaza war.

    Eight people, aged 16 to 37, from Amsterdam and nearby cities have been detained in an investigation into last week’s violence, police said.

    Police said they identified more than 170 witnesses and took forensic evidence from dozens. The prime minister said they are also reviewing videos posted on social media.

    The mayor banned all demonstrations in the city and declared several parts of Amsterdam as risk zones where the police can stop and search anyone.

    Protesters clash with police on Dam Square. ANP/AFP via Getty Images

    Dozens were detained on Sunday for taking part in pro-Palestinian demonstrations in the center of Amsterdam, which were banned.

    Police broke up a small demonstration in front of Amsterdam’s city hall on Tuesday during a discussion about the riots, Dutch broadcaster NOS reported.

    #Amsterdam #warns #calls #riots #violence #surrounding #Israeli #soccer #match

  • Wellesley High Girls soccer defeats Newton North in Division 1 Final 4

    WELLESLEY – They wanted no part of it. «My bad,» they thought.

    After Wellesley High’s girls soccer team cruised to a 3-0 win over Newton North on a chilly Tuesday night, the Raiders didn’t mind posing with a Division 1 Final Four banner. But touching the trophy that goes with it? No deal.

    2. Wellesley led for 78 minutes and beat North for the third time this fall. The Raiders scored three nice goals to win by 17th time, and then act like they’ve been here before.

    They want another trophy next week.

    #Wellesley #High #Girls #soccer #defeats #Newton #North #Division #Final

  • How the violence happened after the soccer match between the Israeli and Dutch teams

    As incidents of anti-Semitic and Islamophobic abuse rise across Europe, a soccer match between Israel’s Maccabi Tel Aviv and Ajax Amsterdam sparked violence and a firestorm of controversy in the Dutch capital.

    Investigators are still looking into exactly what happened before and after the game, but officials said it included «rioters who actively sought out Israeli fans to assault and attack them,» as well as rioting and violent acts by some Israeli fans.

    Officials issued an emergency decree banning all protests in the city until Thursday, stepped up security at Jewish sites and banned the use of some face coverings.

    This is what we know about how events unfolded.

    Wednesday, Nov. 6

    Maccabi Tel Aviv fans have started arriving for Europa League matches, Europe’s second biggest club football competition after the Champions League. (Israeli clubs have played in UEFA competitions since 1992.)

    Amsterdam’s municipal safety committee said the match was not high-risk «from a footballing point of view» and that there was «no animosity» between the two sets of fans, according to an official report released on Tuesday. The committee said it consulted the police, teams, football hooliganism authorities and UEFA before making the assessment.

    Ajax, the most successful Dutch team, has historically attracted supporters from Amsterdam’s Jewish community, and fans sometimes carry Star of David flags to matches. The club also has many Muslim fans.

    While the evening passed relatively peacefully, police monitored aggressive messages on social media and messaging apps threatening Maccabi fans, according to a report by a group of officials known as the Triangle – Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema; René de Beukelaer, Chief City Prosecutor; and Police Chief Peter Holla.

    They saw «a readiness to act and in a few cases to mobilize at a specific location,» the report added.

    At around 11:00 p.m. local time (5:00 a.m. CET), four people were arrested after they painted pro-Palestinian graffiti at the Johan Cruyff Arena, where Thursday’s match was scheduled to take place, the report said.

    About 1,200 police officers were deployed in the city.

    Thursday, Nov. 7

    Early Thursday, a video posted on X and geolocated by NBC News on Rokin, a main street in downtown Amsterdam, showed a crowd cheering as a man standing on a building’s canopy tore down a Palestinian flag.

    Some in the crowd chanted «Ole» and «f— you Palestine.»

    A police car then slowly drove by, and the fans moved out of the way. It is unclear whether the authorities took any further action.

    UEFA Europa League - Ajax v Maccabi Tel Aviv, Amsterdam, Netherlands - November 7, 2024
    Maccabi Tel Aviv fans in Amsterdam on Thursday.Jeroen Jumelet / EPA / EFE via Shutterstock

    An official report on the incident said the group then split up, with some heading towards the city’s famous red-light district, shouting slogans. Some in the crowd were reportedly wearing masks.

    Some were «taking off their belts» and attacked the taxi. Other taxis were «vandalized» nearby.

    After online calls for «taxi drivers to mobilize» went out, some drivers headed to the Holland Casino, where 400 Israeli fans were reportedly present. The police took the fans away in buses.

    Police escort of Maccabi fans from Tel Aviv
    Police escort Maccabi fans from Tel Aviv to the Amsterdam metro on Thursday.InterVision / AP

    According to the report, «relatively small» clashes continued to break out around the casino.

    Later, the Triangle discussed canceling the match, but found it «untenable» due to the large number of fans already in town.

    At 1 p.m. local time, a large number of Maccabi fans gathered in the city’s central Dam Square, where «police were on standby,» according to the report.

    Video shared on social media and geolocated by NBC News shows Maccabi fans chanting anti-Arab slogans in front of the national monument in the square.

    Maccabi fans could later be seen chanting «Death to the Arabs» and «Long live the IDF». We’re going to fuck the Arabs,» as well as tearing up another Palestinian flag.

    Pro-Palestinian groups initially planned to protest outside the Johan Cruyff Arena during the match, but Mayor Halsema said at a press conference on Friday that she had moved the demonstration to a remote location.

    Amsterdam, like many cities around the world, has been the scene of large-scale protests against Israel’s war in Gaza, which has killed more than 43,000 people in the blockaded enclave, according to health officials. Israel’s invasion of Gaza followed the terrorist attacks by Hamas on October 7, in which about 1,200 people were killed and about 250 hostages were taken by Palestinian militants.

    Maccabi Tel Aviv fans stage a pro-Israel demonstration and tear down Palestinian flags hanging in the streets of Amsterdam on November 7, 2024.
    Maccabi Tel Aviv fans staged a pro-Israel demonstration in Amsterdam on Thursday.Mouneb Taim / Anadolu via Getty Images

    Shortly before kick-off at 9pm local time (3pm CET), several videos posted on social media showed Maccabi fans jeering, whistling and lighting torches during a minute’s silence for victims of Spain’s deadly floods. The sign on the stadium read «In memory of the victims of the floods in Valencia.»

    This led to a lot of criticism on social media, although several Israeli fans interviewed after the match said they did not hear the call for silence.

    The match ended around 11pm local time (5pm EST). And after watching their team thrashed 5-0, many Maccabi fans returned to their hotels and downtown.

    Friday, Nov. 8

    Within an hour of the match ending, security collapsed.

    The trouble was expected in part because of messages on social media «confirming that there are groups looking for a clash with Maccabi fans,» according to Tuesday’s report. Officials cited screenshots from messaging apps that called for «Jew hunting.»

    Maccabi fans in the area were repeatedly attacked by pro-Palestinian «rioters who were captured and escaped,» according to the report. The police struggled to quell the violence, and some fans were seriously injured.

    The report said that unlike traditional hooliganism, in which people associated with rival clubs fight each other, police work was made more difficult because rioters moved in «small groups, on foot, in scooters or cars to attack Maccabi fans. briefly and then disappear again.”

    Video, verified by NBC News, showed a man hiding on the ground. «I’ll give you my money,» he said. His attacker shouted: “This is for children! For the children, mother—-r. Free Palestine now.”

    Other videos showed people being kicked and beaten in the street. It was not immediately clear who the attackers or victims were.

    Meanwhile, around midnight, a larger group of Maccabi fans were spotted in the Dam Square area.

    «Some walk around with sticks in their hands and commit vandalism,» the report says.

    A video recorded early Friday by Bender, a popular YouTube channel, shows a group of men, some wearing Maccabi fan colors, picking up pipes and boards from a construction site before chasing and beating the man.

    Around 2:45 a.m., the Israeli ambassador contacted Mayor Halsema and said there was «a lot of anger» in Israel over the events in Amsterdam.

    Videos posted on social media and verified by NBC News showed some Maccabi fans returning home to Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion International Airport chanting, «Why is school out in Gaza? There are no more children there.”

    The violence sparked international condemnation.

    Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said he was «appalled by the anti-Semitic attacks».

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu compared the incident to Kristallnacht, or the «Night of Broken Glass,» on November 9, 1938, when Nazi Germany unleashed violent riots aimed at expelling the Jewish community and vandalizing their homes, synagogues and businesses.

    Ambassador Deborah Lipstadt, the US special envoy for monitoring and combating anti-Semitism, said the violence was «horribly reminiscent of a classic pogrom».

    In a post on X, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock called the images coming out of Amsterdam «horrific and very shameful for us in Europe.»

    UEFA, which organizes the Europa League, condemned the violence and said it trusted the authorities to «identify and charge as many as possible those responsible for such acts».

    A total of 62 people were arrested on suspicion of violent acts in public, vandalism and disturbing public order, according to the official report. Forty-nine of them were Dutch and 10 Israeli, and the nationality of three is unknown, the Triangle report says, adding that 45 were fined and four remained in prison. Two minors were «suspected of aggravated assault».

    Sunday, Nov. 10

    After 24 hours of relative peace, police detained 50 people at a pro-Palestinian rally for defying a ban on protests in Amsterdam. Another 340 people were loaded onto buses and dropped off on the outskirts of the city.

    The protest is taking place while the city is under a state of emergency and a ban on demonstrations.
    Police clashed with protesters during a demonstration on Dam Square in Amsterdam on Sunday.Robin van Lonkhuijsen / AFP – Getty Images

    Authorities later extended the ban on protests until Thursday.

    French President Emmanuel Macron’s office said he would attend the match between Israel and France on Thursday – in a bid to promote «brotherhood and solidarity» following the events in Amsterdam.

    Meanwhile, Israel urged its citizens to avoid attending cultural and sporting events abroad in the coming week.

    Netanyahu’s office said in a statement that Israel has intelligence that pro-Palestinian groups abroad plan to harm Israelis in cities in the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, France, Belgium and other countries.

    Monday, Nov. 11

    After the riots in Amsterdam, the windows of the tram were broken
    After riots in Amsterdam on Monday night, broken windows on a tram.Mizzle Media / via Reuters

    Due to high tensions, dozens of people set fire to a tram in Amsterdam on Monday night.

    Video geolocated by NBC News shows the group throwing fireworks and other blunt objects at the streetcar, with some chanting «Jews are cancer.» Police said it was unclear who started the riots and whether they were connected to what happened last week.

    Police announced on Monday that five new arrests had been made over the weekend. The five men, all residents of the Netherlands, aged between 18 and 37, are «suspected of public violence against persons on Thursday evening,» it said.


    #violence #happened #soccer #match #Israeli #Dutch #teams

  • 2024 Men’s Soccer All-ACC Team Announced

    CHARLOTTE, NC (theACC.com) – The 2024 All-Atlantic Coast Conference men’s soccer team and award winners for the season were announced Wednesday after voting by the league’s 15 head coaches.

    Notre Dame senior forward Matthew Roou was named ACC Offensive Player of the Year and Pitt junior linebacker Casper Svendby was named ACC Defensive Player of the Year. Clemson senior Joran Gerbet earned ACC Midfielder of the Year honors, while Duke graduate Wessel Speel was named ACC Goalkeeper of the Year. Clemson midfielder Ransford Gyan won the Rookie of the Year award. Pitt head coach Jay Vidovch has been named the ACC Coach of the Year by his peers for a record eighth time.

    Roou was named first team All-ACC for the second straight season. The Germantown, Wisconsin native was also the only player to repeat as a first-team All-ACC honoree since 2023. Roou leads the ACC in goals (14), goals per game (0.82) and points (32) this season. , which is fourth in the national rankings in goals and sixth in goals per game and points. Four of his goals were game-winners.

    Svendby is the league’s best defense as the Panthers have allowed just 0.82 goals per game, the fewest among league teams and 14th fewest in the country. He also scored three goals and added a pair of assists. The native of Drammen, Norway is in his first season with Pitt after spending two seasons in Dayton.

    Gerbet had seven goals and eight assists while leading Clemson to the No. 2 seed for the 2024 ACC Men’s Soccer Championship. His 22 total points ranked fourth in the ACC and were the most among any midfielder in the league. Hailing from Valence, France, Gerbet was named to the All-ACC team for the second straight season after earning third-team honors in 2023.

    Speel has a league-low 0.99 goals-against average and six shutouts this season for Duke, currently ranked No. 2 in the nation. A native of Utrecht, Netherlands, he started all 18 games for the Blue Devils in his first season after arriving as a graduate transfer from Hofstra.

    Gyan has three goals and five assists for 11 points from the midfield position this season. A native of Sunyani, Ghana, Gyan played in all 18 of Clemson’s games, starting 15.

    Vidovich, named ACC Coach of the Year for the eighth time, led Pitt to its first ACC regular season title this season. The Panthers have a 12-5-0 record, including a 6-2-0 mark in conference play, and are currently ranked No. 3 in the latest NCAA RPI. This is Vidovich’s third ACC Coach of the Year honor while at Pitt (2020, 2021); he also earned the honor in 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008 and 2009 when he was Wake Forest’s head coach.

    The semifinals of the 2024 ACC Men’s Soccer Championship will be held on Thursday, November 14 at WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary, North Carolina, with Virginia and Wake Forest facing off at 5:30 p.m. ET, followed by California playing Clemson at approximately 8 p.m. hours. ET. The ACC Network will televise both games. The championship game will be televised from WakeMed Soccer Park on ESPNU on Sunday, Nov. 17 at noon ET.

    In Tuesday’s latest NCAA RPI, ACC teams hold 12 of the top 50 spots, led by Pitt at No. 3, followed by Virginia (6), Duke (8), Stanford (9), SMU (12), Clemson (14), UNC (17), Wake Forest (21), California (26), NC State (32), Virginia Tech (41) and Notre Dame (47).

    2024 ACC Men’s Soccer Season Honors
    Offensive Player of the Year – Matthew Roou, Sr., F, Notre Dame
    Defensive Player of the Year –Casper Svendby, Jr., D, Pitt
    Midfielder of the year – Joran Gerbet, Sr., Clemson
    Goalkeeper of the year – Wessel Speel, Gr., Duke
    Freshman year – Ransford Gyan, M, Clemson
    Coach of the year – Jay Vidovich, Pitt

    2024 All-ACC team
    The first team

    Joran Gerbet, Sr., M, Clemson
    Alex Meinhard, Gr., F, Clemson
    Ulfur Bjornsson, So., F, Duke
    Wessel Speel, Gr., GK, Duke
    Riley Thomas, Gr., D, North Carolina
    Matthew Roou, Jr., F, Notre Dame
    Guilherme Feitosa, Sr., M, Pitt
    Luis Sahmkow, Sr., F, Pitt
    Casper Svendby, Jr., D, Pitt
    Bailey Sparks Sr., F, SMU
    Zach Bohane, Jr., M, Stanford

    Another team

    Ash Ekeland, Jr., M, Boston College
    Kevin Carmichael, Sr., D, Cal
    Ransford Gyan, Fr., M, Clemson
    Adam Luckhurst, Gr., F, Duke
    Martin Vician, Gr., F, North Carolina
    Taig Healy, Jr., M, NC State
    Hakim Karamoko, So., F, NC State
    Casper Grening, Sr., M, Pitt
    Nick Dang, Jr., D, Virginia
    Trace Alphin, Sr., GK, Wake Forest
    Cooper Flax, Jr., M, Wake Forest

    The third team

    Nonso Adimabua, Gr., F, California
    Kamran Acito, Jr., D, Duke
    Kenan Hot, Jr., M, Duke
    Ruben Mesalles, Sr., D, Duke
    Gage Guerra, Sr., F, Louisville
    Josh Jones, Sr., D, Louisville
    Sam Williams, Jr., M, North Carolina
    Bryce Boneau, jr., M, Notre Dame
    Cabral Carter, Jr., GK, Pitt
    Jackson Gilman, Jr., D, Pitt
    Kyran Chambron Pinho, Sr., D, SMU

    2024 Freshman Team

    Ransford Gyan, M, Clemson
    Luke Magnason, D, Clemson
    Wahabu Musah, F, Clemson
    Jamie Caboose, M, Duke
    Tate Johnson, D, North Carolina
    Nikola Markovic, D, NC State
    Lasse Dahl, F, Pitt
    Niklas Soerensen, D, Pitt
    Chimere Omeze, D, Syracuse
    Olafur Floki Stephensen, D, Virginia Tech
    Dylan Borso, M, Wake Forest


    #Mens #Soccer #AllACC #Team #Announced