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Ohio Wesleyan University

Delaware, OH 43015
Ohio Midwest
Private Small Developing team

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Pat Ferguson

Pat Ferguson is in his third season as head coach of the Ohio Wesleyan University women's soccer team.


Last season, the Battling Bishops finished with a 12-3-4 overall record, tied for third place in the North Coast Athletic Conference standings with a 4-1-2 mark, advanced to the NCAC tournament for the first time since 2011, and hosted the NCAC tournament championship game.


The 2021 Bishops finished with a 9-5-4 overall record and finished fifth in the NCAC standings with a 4-3-1 mark.


Ferguson came to Ohio Wesleyan from Wright State University, where he served as head coach from 2005-21. During his 16 seasons, the Raiders compiled a record of 148-114-34 (.557), reaching the finals of the Horizon League tournament 3 times and the semifinals 9 times. Ferguson was a 2-time pick as Horizon League Coach of the Year. His teams set school records for consecutive wins and wins in a season. The Raiders also succeeded in the classroom under Ferguson, receiving United Soccer Coaches team academic awards from 2005-21.


Prior to Wright State, Ferguson was head coach at Campbell (N.C.) University from 2000-04, guiding the Camels to the Atlantic Sun Conference title and their first-ever NCAA Division I tournament berth in 2004. In 2001, Campbell was the most improved team in the nation in Division I, improving from a 4-12-1 record in 2000 to 13-6-0 the following year. Ferguson was twice selected Atlantic Sun Coach of the Year.


In 1999, Ferguson was head coach at Mount Union College, where he doubled the Purple Raiders' win total of the previous season.


Ferguson made his collegiate head coaching debut at Malone College as the Pioneers' first head coach in 1997. He led the team to an 11-7-1 record and a regional ranking during its first year of varsity competition.


He also has been head coach and director of player development for the Ohio Soccer Galaxies Club since 2005, winning Ohio South Youth Coach of the Year and regional Coach of the Year honors in 2012. He holds a US Soccer "B" coaching license and a Premier Diploma from United Soccer Coaches.


Ferguson is a 1994 graduate of Malone, majoring in religious studies. He played soccer at Malone, earning All-NCCAA East Region honors twice and NAIA honorable mention all-region recognition once. Ferguson continued his education with a master of education degree in curriculum design from Malone in 2004.


He is a native of Strongsville, Ohio.

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Jim Wendling

Jim Wendling is in his third season as an assistant coach with the Ohio Wesleyan University women's soccer team.


Wendling came to Ohio Wesleyan after serving as athletics director at the Lake campus of Wright State University.


He has a wealth of coaching experience at the collegiate and professional levels. Most recently, he was with the Dayton Dutch Lions of the Women's Professional Soccer League, serving as head coach in 2019 and associate head coach in 2017.


Prior to coaching in the professional ranks, he was director of soccer operations and assistant women's coach at Wright State University, helping the Raiders advance to the Horizon League tournament final in 2015 and the tournament quarterfinal in 2016.


Wending was head coach at Canisius College from 2008-14. In his first season at the helm of the Golden Griffins, he guided a team that had not had a winning season in 14 years to an 11-5-3 record, winning Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Coach of the Year honors. His teams received regional top-10 rankings in each of his first 3 seasons, with the 2010 team winning the MAAC regular-season championship.


From 1998-2008, Wendling was head coach at Urbana University, founding both the men's and women's soccer teams. He posted 83 wins in both men's and women's soccer, recording 5 seasons of double-digit victories during his 9 years as men's coach and 5 seasons of double-digit wins during his 8 seasons as women's coach. He also was head women's coach at Wittenberg University in 1995-96, guiding the Tigers to a 15-3 record and a No. 7 national ranking in 1995. Wendling began his coaching career as boys head coach at Miami Valley High School in 1990.


He holds a USSF "D" license.


Wendling is a 1983 graduate of the University of Dayton, majoring in physical education. He served in the United States Marine Corps for 4 years before beginning his coaching career.


He is a native of Waynesville, Ohio.

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Allison Turner

Assistant Coach

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Jay Martin

How broad is Ohio Wesleyan head coach Jay Martin's record of service to soccer? Come up with any combination of level (high school, college, professional) and function (player, coach, administrator), and he's probably done it.


Martin is the winningest coach in NCAA men's soccer history with a total of 749 wins. He is the first men's soccer coach in any NCAA division to reach the 700-win mark.


Heading into the 2023 season, he has guided his 45 Battling Bishop soccer teams to a 749-158-80 record. His career winning percentage of .799 entering the 2023 season ranks 14th all-time in the NCAA.


The 2022 Bishops finished second in the North Coast Athletic Conference championship race with a 6-0-2 record, won the NCAC tournament, and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Division III tournament on the way to an 11-5-4 overall mark. The Battling Bishop staff was named NCAC Coaching Staff of the Year in recognition of those accomplishments, marking the 10th time that Martin has been by honored the NCAC.


In 2021, the Bishops finished second in the NCAC with an 8-1-0 record and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Division III tournament on the way to a 15-3-2 overall mark.


In 45 seasons, Martin's teams have compiled a 297-30-24 record in conference play, a winning percentage of .880, and have won 26 conference crowns.


In 2011, Martin guided Ohio Wesleyan to its second NCAA Division III national championship. Along the way, the Bishops extended their unbeaten string in NCAC competition to a league-record 40 games.


Another peak in Martin's already-illustrious coaching career came when he guided the Battling Bishops to the 1998 NCAA Division III championship.


His teams have reached the NCAA Division III semifinals 9 times, finishing as national runner-up twice in addition to the 1998 and 2011 titles. They have been among the final 16 teams a total of 29 times and have brought home 12 regional titles, including 9 in the last 15 seasons that the NCAA tournament included a regional format. Ohio Wesleyan holds the NCAA Division III record with 43 playoff appearances and has recorded 65 playoff victories.


Martin's teams set another NCAA record with 18 consecutive Division III tournament berths from 1978-95 and have won an unprecedented 23 Stu Parry Awards, the latter recognizing Ohio's top Division III team each year.


He has been the NCAA Regional Coach of the Year 16 times in his 45 years at Ohio Wesleyan and was named NSCAA national Coach of the Year in 1991, 1998, and 2011. In 2000, Martin received the Ohio Collegiate Soccer Association's Honor Award, only the fourth time that award was bestowed since the association’s founding in 1949. He received the National Soccer Coaches Association of America's Honor Award in 2007, and was inducted into the United Soccer Coaches Hall of Fame in 2020.


Under Martin's guidance, Ohio Wesleyan was the winningest men's soccer team in the NCAA -- regardless of division -- during the 1980s, compiling a winning percentage of .815 to top such programs as Indiana, UNC-Greensboro and UCLA. The Battling Bishops bettered that during the 1990s, compiling a winning percentage of .825, and improved upon that during the 2000s, with a winning percentage of .827.


His lacrosse teams posted an 8-year record of 104-34, winning 3 Midwest Lacrosse Association titles, earning 6 NCAA playoff bids and twice making Martin the MLA Coach of the Year. And talk about developing individual talent -- in both sports, in 51 seasons, Martin has turned out 61 All-America and 214 all-region or All-Midwest players.


Martin calls having fun the key. "Of course, to have fun you have to do your best," he adds, "and it helps to do so against the best competition." Hence, the Bishops' perennially ambitious schedules, liberally sprinkled with nationally-ranked opponents. He favors a skillful, ball-control game and rates his players as "first-class athletes and men."


Beyond coaching, Martin also has served soccer with a term as president of the National Soccer Coaches Association of America as well as a 6-year stint on the NCAA Division III selection committee, including 4 years as committee chair. He has been a color analyst of the Major League Soccer's Columbus Crew for 9 seasons. In addition, he took over as editor of the NSCAA's The Soccer Journal in January, 2003, becoming the publication's third editor since its establishment in 1950.


Martin is a professor in Ohio Wesleyan's physical education department and served as the Battling Bishops' athletics director from 1985-2004. During his 19 years as athletics director, Ohio Wesleyan intercollegiate athletics enjoyed unprecedented success. Ohio Wesleyan won a conference-record 6 consecutive NCAC all-sports championships from 1988-94. More recently, the Battling Bishops finished in the top 25 of the NACDA Directors Cup NCAA Division III standings in 6 of the last 8 academic years under Martin's leadership.


Prior to joining the Ohio Wesleyan faculty, Martin served as a 2-sport assistant at The Ohio State University, from which he received both M.A. and Ph.D. degrees. Earlier, he was director of sport at the Munich, Germany, YMCA, coaching soccer, volleyball, basketball and lacrosse; and athletics director at the American International School at Dusseldorf.


A native of Hingham, Mass., Martin received his B.A. degree from Springfield College in 1971. He lettered in soccer and lacrosse, earning All-America laurels in the latter. In Germany, he also played soccer for the Kaiserwerth Club, played professional basketball and served on the staff of the Volleyball Pavilion at the 1972 Olympics.

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Matt Weiss

Matt Weiss is in his third season as associate head coach of the Ohio Wesleyan University men's soccer team and his ninth season as a member of the Battling Bishop men's soccer coaching staff.


Weiss is the recruiting coordinator for the program and also is in charge of the defensive unit.


The 2022 Battling Bishops finished second in the North Coast Athletic Conference championship race with a 6-0-2 record, won the NCAC tournament, and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Division III tournament on the way to an 11-5-4 overall mark. Ohio Wesleyan tied the North Coast Athletic Conference record for fewest goals allowed in conference play (1), ranked 15th among 408 NCAA Division III teams in NCAA Division III in goals-against average (0.593), and tied for 11th nationally in fewest goals allowed (12). The Bishop staff was named NCAC Coaching Staff of the Year in recognition of those accomplishments.


In 2021, the Bishops finished second in the NCAC with an 8-1 record and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Division III tournament, finishing with a record of 15-3-2. Ohio Wesleyan ranked 10th among 406 NCAA Division III teams in NCAA Division III in goals-against average (0.581), tied for 11th in fewest goals allowed (12), and ranked fifth in shutouts (11).


The 2019 Bishops ranked second among 410 NCAA Division III teams in goals-against average (0.476) and tied for fourth in fewest goals allowed (12) and shutouts (13). The Bishops also had the NCAA Division III individual champion in goals-against average.


Since joining the Ohio Wesleyan staff in 2014, Weiss has been a part of 7 NCAA Division III tournament appearances, including the 2014 national semifinals; 2 NCAC tournament championships, and an NCAC championship, while helping the Bishops compile an overall record of 109-39-23.


He also is the Elite Clubs National League (ECNL) Director for Ohio Premier. In 2022, his 2006 age group were ranked No. 1 nationally throughout the season as it finished a perfect 16-0 in the regular season, won its third consecutive conference championship, led the country in fewest goals allowed, and advanced to the ECNL National Elite 8.


Before coming to Ohio Wesleyan, Weiss coached at Olentangy High School for 6 seasons. He was named Columbus Assistant Coach of the Year in 2010 and Ohio Capital Conference Coach of the Year in 2012. During his time at Olentangy, the Braves recorded their highest win total ever in a 4-year span, set a program record for consecutive shutouts, and won their first-ever league championship.


He holds a USSF "B" license and a United Soccer Coaches Sports Performance Diploma, and is currently pursuing his master’s degree in coaching education.


Weiss is a 2008 graduate of Otterbein College. He played 3 years for the Cardinals and graduated with a bachelor's degree in sports management.


He is a native of Worthington, Ohio.

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Hector Gomez

Hector Gomez begins his first season as an assistant coach of the Ohio Wesleyan University men's soccer team.


Gomez returns to Ohio Wesleyan from Cleveland State University, where he completed his collegiate playing career during the 2022 season.


He had a spectacular playing career with the Battling Bishops, twice earning All-America honors as well as 2 first-team all-region citations, 3 All-Ohio honors, 2 North Coast Athletic Conference Midfielder of the Year selections, and NCAC Newcomer of the Year laurels during his 3 seasons. He led the NCAC in points and shared the league lead in goals as a senior, led the conference in assists as a sophomore, and ranked in the conference's top 5 in both assists and points as a freshman. Gomez majored in business administration and sports and exercise management at Ohio Wesleyan and continued his education at Cleveland State, pursuing a master's degree in marketing.


Gomez is a native of Columbus and attended St. Francis DeSales High School.

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