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Duke Women's Soccer was established in 1988 under head coach Bill Hempen, who was a Duke Men's soccer coach prior to this position. [2] Hempen was assisted by Carla Overbeck, [3] a previous player at UNC Chapel Hill. While at UNC, Overbeck remained unbeaten for four seasons, and won four national championships.
The 2024 Duke Blue Devils women's soccer team represents Duke University during the 2024 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. The Blue Devils are led by head coach Robbie Church, in his twenty-fourth season.
This was the team's 34th season playing organized women's college soccer and their 34th playing in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Blue Devils finished the season with a 16–4–1 record, 7–2–1 in ACC play to finish in third place. The lost in the First Round of the ACC Tournament.
Michelle Cooper is the first Duke women’s player to receive the trophy, awarded annually by the Missouri Athletic Club to the top athletes in NCAA Division I soccer.
Duke and Georgia Tech last played on Jan. 14 when the Blue Devils won, 84-46. It was a game the Yellow Jackets wanted to forget. Fortunately for the team from Durham — and unfortunately for the ...
Through the early stages of the pandemic, the Duke soccer team transformed. In the 2019 season, the Blue Devils struggled, stumbling to a 9-4-7 record (3-1-6 in ACC). There was talent on the team ...
All Division I women's soccer programs were eligible to qualify for the tournament. 29 teams received automatic bids by winning their conference tournaments, 1 team received an automatic bid by claiming the conference regular season crown (West Coast Conference doesn't hold a conference tournament), and an additional 34 teams earned at-large bids based on their regular season records.
Robbie Church has coached Duke since 2001. He announced Monday that this season will be his last before current assistant Kieran Hall will take over as the Blue Devils head coach.