New England Soccer Journal

  • Login
  • Logout
  • Subscribe
  • Dashboard
Subscribe
D1 Men

Insider: Providence holds Georgetown to draw, Boston College faces heartbreak

By Jonathan SigalMarch 7, 2021

Senior Ramzi Qawasmy is a leader for Providence's staunch defense. (Stew Milne)

Through four games and 396 minutes of its spring season, Providence College is yet to allow a goal.

Head coach Craig Stewart’s team is proving formidable at the back, battling defending national champions Georgetown to a 0-0 home draw on Saturday afternoon.

The Friars (3-0-1) were outshot 11-6, but did enough to thwart high-end attacking players like forward Derek Dodson, who was selected No. 8 overall (first round) by Orlando City SC in the 2021 MLS SuperDraft, and Dante Povlara, a New York City FC academy product.

Tags: ACC, Albany, Big East, Boston College, Craig Stewart, Georgetown, Providence, Seton Hall, UConn, UMass, Wake Forest

Subscribe to finish reading this story

SUBSCRIBE

Members login below

Register
Forgot Password?

Related Articles

New Hampshire

Insider: New Hampshire doubles up Northeastern, seeks another level

Heading into the spring, New Hampshire had to find a new No. 10 in its diamond midfield after Antonio Colacci’s remarkable four-year career ran out.…
Read More
Hartford

Insider: Hartford turns to experience in America East-opening win

Continuity could go a long way for Hartford this spring, especially after advancing to the America East championship game in 2019. And based on Friday…
Read More
URI

Insider: URI logs first win on busy Wednesday for local teams

With so many new faces, Rhode Island head coach Gareth Elliott knows that this spring’s team is a work in progress. But the Rams could…
Read More

NESJ Insider Newsletter

  • Subscribe
  • Seamans Media, Inc.
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Contact Us

© Copyright 2022 Seamans Media, Inc. • All Rights Reserved

Contact Us!

Please write a brief description and someone will get back to you shortly!

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.