College Edition College_FALL_II_2013 | Page 12

we have in this program,” added Coach Jusino. Briarcliffe soccer players may play with a chip on their shoulder, but they also play behind underrated support from the school. Morais mentioned an all-expenses paid preseason trip, free gear, games with Division I programs, and other perks enjoyed by his players. The fifth year coach (two national titles, three runner up finishes) told me hasn’t really had to recruit over the last few years because of the reputation he’s helped create for his super successful, player-friendly program. T Briarcliffe playing like Bulldogs Story by Scott Bickard // Photos Courtesy of Briarcliffe Athletics 12 WWW.ULTIMATEATHLETEMAGAZINE.COM he Briarcliffe men’s soccer team (102-1) plays its home games at Triangle Park in Hicksville, a nice field but one that also runs youth and adult leagues. Young head coach Rafael Morais sets up shop in a shared “athletic office” with the schools’ seven other athletic teams. The Bethpage campus contains not a patch of grass – in fact the building stands at a close enough distance to the old Grumman factories that it could be said Briarcliffe has negative grass. It is comments and perceived slights such as these that drive the soccer program and Briarcliffe’s enormously successful athletic department in general. That point was made by Morais, whose teams have competed in the last five national championships and won last year’s title, and reinforced by head baseball coach Ed Jusino, who happened to be listening (the office’s proximities made that inevitable) and whose baseball teams have happened to won the last two national championships. “Bulldog” (also the team’s mascot) is how Rafael Morais describes his stout senior midfielder Leandro Caldas. “That’s a good way to describe the type of athletes The strength of Morais’ program derives from the system he inherited from former coach Jack Stefanowski (who’s since coached the Nepal national team and in Peurto Rican professional leagues; “a great guy,” said Morais) and a pipeline of international recruits. Most of his roster consists of guys from South America, including Brazil, Columbia, Uruguay and El Salvador as well as a few players from Mexico. Some attended high school around Long Island. Others came directly over seas. These are guys who may have been just below standard for pro ball in their home countries or who want to use their soccer skills as a way to an education and life in the United States. Those who emigrate, Morais told me, will apply for an extension on their visa when they graduate to see if they can make it in the U.S. They may even find work at Morais’ youth soccer academy. The soccer program is a “big family,” says Morais. The players are close and integration is easier than one would think given the diverse backgrounds. The makeup of Morais’ roster is the norm at nationals, where players from all over the world play for colleges all over the United States. Gameplay reflects its international participants: pretty soccer filled with constant passing where “the ball is kept on the ground”. Some players play pro ball, including a few of Morais’ former players. If I had any more doubts about the competiveness of Briarcliff’s division – which isn’t I, II, or III but the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA) – he recounted how well his team has fared against DI and DII opponents like Stony Brook, CW Post, Sacred Heart and Molloy, all of whom the Bulldogs have played to at least a tie during Morais’ tenure. Such games bring out the best in 13