Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Ian McIntyre | ||
Date of birth | c. 1972 (age 50–51) | ||
Place of birth | Basildon, England | ||
Position(s) | Sweeper | ||
College career | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1992–1995 | Hartwick | 79 | (18) |
Managerial career | |||
1996–1998 | Fairfield University (assistant) | ||
1998–2002 | Oneonta | ||
2003–2009 | Hartwick | ||
2010– | Syracuse |
Ian McIntyre (born 1972) is the coach of the Syracuse Orange men's soccer team. He previously coached at Oneonta and Hartwick.
McIntyre grew up in Basildon, England and played for an Arsenal FC youth team. [1]
McIntyre was a sweeper for the Hartwick Hawks from 1992 to 1995. [1] [2] The team had a 50–20–7 record during his four seasons as a player. The team also made 2 NCAA Tournament berths and a 52-20-7 record during his four seasons. McIntyre was named to the NSCAA All-American First Team in 1995. [3] In that same year, he was named the Hartwick Male Athlete of the Year. He was inducted into the Hartwick College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2001, his first year of eligibility. [3] [4]
McIntyre began his coaching career at Fairfield University as an assistant coach from 1996 to 1998 under former Hartwick assistant coach Carl Rees. During his time, the team had two consecutive Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference championship game appearances. [3]
In 1998, he was hired as the head coach at Oneonta State and coached there until 2002. [5] In 2003, his alma mater, Hartwick hired him as head coach.
After seven seasons at Hartwick, McIntyre was hired on as the head coach at Syracuse University by AD Daryl Gross. [3] [4] McIntyre inherited a struggling program from Dean Foti, who had coached at Syracuse from 1991 to 2009. The year before McIntyre took over, the Orange finished 3–15. [6] [7] In his first year, the team continued to struggle, posting a 2–10–5 record. However, McIntyre has led the team to great improvements in the following 5 years, winning an ACC Championship in 2015 and making several NCAA Tournament appearances. [1] [8] As of 2023, 19 players coached by McIntyre have been drafted to the MLS since 2010. [9]
Ian McIntyre has brought the Orange to the 2022 National Championship, [10] two NCAA Tournament College Cup in 2015 and 2022, and two ACC Conference Titles in 2015 and 2022. McIntyre was named the National College Coach of the Year in 2022, [11] the ACC Coach of the Year in 2014 and 2022, [12] [13] and the Big East Coach of the Year in 2012.
Season | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Postseason | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oneonta (State University of New York Athletic Conference)(1999–2002) | |||||||||
1999 | Oneonta | 10–6–1 | |||||||
2000 | Oneonta | 11–6–1 | |||||||
2001 | Oneonta | 10–7–1 | |||||||
2002 | Oneonta | 5–9–4 | |||||||
Oneonta: | 36–28–7 | ||||||||
Hartwick (Atlantic Soccer Conference)(2003–2006) | |||||||||
2003 | Hartwick | 15–2–1 | 3–1–1 | 2nd | |||||
2004 | Hartwick | 13–3–3 | 4–1–0 | 2nd | |||||
2005 | Hartwick | 13–6–1 | 5–1–0 | 1st | NCAA 1st Round | ||||
2006 | Hartwick | 8–10–2 | 3–2–1 | T-2nd | |||||
Hartwick (Atlantic Soccer Conference)(2007–2009) | |||||||||
2007 | Hartwick | 5–6–7 | 2–1–2 | 3rd | |||||
2008 | Hartwick | 7–5–7 | 2–2–2 | 4th | |||||
2009 | Hartwick | 10–4–4 | 3–2–2 | 2nd | |||||
Hartwick: | 71–36–25 | 22–10–8 | |||||||
Syracuse (Big East Conference)(2010–2012) | |||||||||
2010 | Syracuse | 2–10–5 | 0–6–3 | ||||||
2011 | Syracuse | 3–12–1 | 1–7–1 | ||||||
2012 | Syracuse | 14–6–1 | 5–3–0 | 4th | NCAA Third Round [14] | ||||
Syracuse (Atlantic Coast Conference)(2013–present) | |||||||||
2013 | Syracuse | 10–7–1 | 3–7–1 | 10th | |||||
2014 | Syracuse | 16–4–1 | 5–2–1 | T-1st (Atlantic) | NCAA Third Round | ||||
2015 | Syracuse | 16–5–4 | 3–4–1 | 4th (Atlantic) | ACC Champions NCAA Semifinals | ||||
2016 | Syracuse | 12–4–4 | 4–2–3 | 4th (Atlantic) | NCAA Third Round | ||||
2017 | Syracuse | 6–8–4 | 0–6–2 | 6th (Atlantic) | |||||
2018 | Syracuse | 7–7–4 | 1–4–3 | 5th (Atlantic) | NCAA Second Round | ||||
2019 | Syracuse | 8–7–5 | 2–4–2 | 6th (Atlantic) | NCAA Second Round | ||||
2020 | Syracuse | 2–7–4 | 0–6–3 | 6th (Atlantic) | |||||
2021 | Syracuse | 8–8–2 | 2–5–1 | 5th (Atlantic) | |||||
2022 | Syracuse | 19–2–4 | 5–1–2 | 1st (Atlantic) | ACC Champions NCAA Champions | ||||
Syracuse: | 123–87–40 | 20–40–17 | |||||||
Total: | 230–151–72 | ||||||||
National champion Postseason invitational champion |
The Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) is a collegiate athletic conference located in the United States. Headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, the ACC's fifteen member universities compete in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)'s Division I. ACC football teams compete in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision. The ACC sponsors competition in twenty-seven sports with many of its member institutions held in high regard nationally. Current members of the conference are: Boston College, Clemson, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Louisville, Miami, North Carolina, NC State, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, Syracuse, Virginia, Virginia Tech, and Wake Forest.
The Syracuse Orange are the athletic teams that represent Syracuse University. The school is a member of NCAA Division I and the Atlantic Coast Conference. Until 2013, Syracuse was a member of the Big East Conference.
James Arthur Boeheim Jr. is an American former college basketball coach and current Special Assistant to the Athletic Director at Syracuse University. From 1976 until 2023, he was the head coach of the Syracuse Orange men's team of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). Boeheim guided the Orange to ten Big East Conference regular season championships, five Big East tournament championships, and 34 NCAA tournament appearances, including five Final Four appearances and three appearances in the national title game. In those games, the Orangemen lost to Indiana in 1987, and to Kentucky in 1996, before defeating Kansas in 2003 with All-American Carmelo Anthony.
Syracuse Orange is the NCAA college soccer team for Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York. They are a Division I team in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
The Wake Forest University Demon Deacons men's soccer team is an NCAA Division I college soccer team composed of students attending Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. They achieved their greatest result in 2007, winning the 2007 Division I Men's College Cup. Like all sports teams from Wake Forest, men's soccer competes in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). The Deacons play their home matches at Spry Stadium on the campus of Wake Forest.
The Hartwick Hawks men's soccer team represents Hartwick College as member of the Empire 8 in NCAA Division III. The Hawks play their home matches on Elmore Field located on the Hartwick campus in Oneonta, New York. The team is coached by John Scott, the seventh head coach in the program's long history. The Hawks were distinguished by being the only Division III program playing Division I men's soccer as an affiliate member of the Sun Belt Conference and by having won the 1977 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. However, on February 28, 2018, Hartwick announced that the men's soccer program would be moving from D1 to D3.
The Syracuse Orange field hockey team is the intercollegiate field hockey program representing Syracuse University. The school competes in the Atlantic Coast Conference of NCAA Division I field hockey.
The 2014 Syracuse Orange men's soccer team represented Syracuse University during the 2014 NCAA Division I men's soccer season.
The Syracuse Orange women's soccer team represents Syracuse University in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) of NCAA Division I women's college soccer. The team has never won a conference championship. The Orange have played in both the ACC and Big East. The team has advanced to the NCAA Women's soccer tournament twice. In both appearances, the Orange won their first-round game, but fell in the second round.
The 2018 Syracuse Orange men's soccer team represented Syracuse University during the 2018 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. It was the program's 95th season and 6th in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Orange were led by Ian McIntyre, who was in his ninth year.
The 2019 Syracuse Orange men's soccer team represented Syracuse University during the 2019 NCAA Division I men's soccer season. It was the program's 96th season and 7th in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Orange were led by Ian McIntyre, is in his tenth year.
The 2021 Syracuse Orange women's soccer team represented Syracuse University during the 2021 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. The Orange were led by head coach Nicky Adams, in her third season. They played home games at SU Soccer Stadium. This is the team's 25th season playing organized women's college soccer, and their 8th playing in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
The 2022 Atlantic Coast Conference men's soccer season was the 69th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference.
The 2022 season is the 103rd season of Syracuse University fielding a men's varsity soccer team. It was the program's 10th season in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and their 13th season with Ian McIntyre as the head coach of the program. Syracuse played their home matches at SU Soccer Stadium in Syracuse, New York.
The 2022 ACC men's soccer tournament was the 36th edition of the ACC Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament decided the Atlantic Coast Conference champion and guaranteed representative into the 2022 NCAA Division I men's soccer tournament. The final was played at Sahlen's Stadium in Cary, North Carolina.
The 2022–23 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team represented Syracuse University during the 2022–23 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Orange were led by 47th-year head coach Jim Boeheim and played their home games at JMA Wireless Dome in Syracuse, New York as tenth-year members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Orange finished the season 17–15, 10–10 in ACC play to finish in a tie for eighth place. As the eighth seed in the ACC tournament, the lost to Wake Forest in the second round. This was the second year in a row that Syracuse did not qualify for a post season tournament, a first in Boeheim's 47-year tenure.
The 2022 Syracuse Orange women's soccer team represented Syracuse University during the 2022 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. The Orange were led by head coach Nicky Adams, in her fourth season. They played home games at SU Soccer Stadium. This was the team's 26th season playing organized women's college soccer, and their 9th playing in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Nathaniel Opoku is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a forward or an attacking midfielder for Belgian Pro League club OH Leuven, on loan from EFL Championship club Leicester City.
Russell Shealy is an American professional soccer player for Crown Legacy FC.
The 2023 season is the 104th season of Syracuse University fielding a men's varsity soccer team. It is the program's 11th season in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and their 14th season with Ian McIntyre as the head coach of the program. Syracuse play their home matches at SU Soccer Stadium in Syracuse, New York.