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Women's Soccer

Women's Soccer Falls to Binghamton, 3-1

BALTIMORE- The UMBC Women's Soccer team (2-13-2, 1-6-0 AEC) lost its final road game of the year, 3-1, at Binghamton (3-10-3, 2-4-1 AEC) in Vestal, N.Y on Thursday evening.

Bearcat back Katie Kerrigan headed the ball off a UMBC defender and past UMBC goalkeeper Christine Bacinski (Hampstead, Md./Mount de Sales) in the 11th minute to give Binghamton a 1-0 lead. Binghamton forward Danielle White was credited with the assist.

Three minutes after the intermission, White took a pass from the left side from Bearcat forward Kim Povill and beat Bacinski from inside the penalty box.

White struck again in the 55th minute, scoring from close range after Bacinski's save of Bearcat midfielder Kerry O'Shaughnessy's shot bounced to her.

In the 66th minute, the Retrievers got on the board when freshman forward Morgan Warrington (Magnolia, Del./St. Thomas Moore Prep) scored off a cross from sophomore forward Michelle Worrest (Germantown, Md./Northwest).

Bacinski made four saves for the Retrievers in 58:46, while junior Catie Bukowski (Odenton, Md./Arundel/South Carolina) recorded two saves in the final 31:14. Bearcat goalie Jen McEachron made four saves.

Binghamton held an 18-8 advantage on shots and a 6-0 advantage on corners.

The Retrievers conclude their season at home for Senior Day on Sunday, hosting Albany at UMBC Soccer Stadium at 1 p.m.

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Players Mentioned

Christine Bacinski

#31 Christine Bacinski

GK
5' 9"
Junior
Catie Bukowski

#1 Catie Bukowski

GK
5' 9"
Junior
Morgan Warrington

#25 Morgan Warrington

B/F
5' 5"
Freshman
Michelle Worrest

#10 Michelle Worrest

F
5' 8"
Sophomore

Players Mentioned

Christine Bacinski

#31 Christine Bacinski

5' 9"
Junior
GK
Catie Bukowski

#1 Catie Bukowski

5' 9"
Junior
GK
Morgan Warrington

#25 Morgan Warrington

5' 5"
Freshman
B/F
Michelle Worrest

#10 Michelle Worrest

5' 8"
Sophomore
F
Land Acknowledgement
UMBC was established upon the land of the Piscataway and Susquehannock peoples. Over time, citizens of many more Indigenous nations have come to reside in this region. We humbly offer our respects to all past, present, and future Indigenous people connected to this place. Learn more about this statement here.