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Georgia Gwinnett College

Lawrenceville, GA 30043
Georgia Southeast
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Dr. Mike Giuliano

Successful coach Dr. Mike Giuliano has led the Georgia Gwinnett College women's soccer program to new heights during his four seasons. The Grizzlies have advanced to the NAIA national tournament five times, capture the 2021 Continental Athletic Conference championship and four Association of Independent Institutions titles in 2020-21, 2019, 2018 and 2017.


Giuliano led GGC to the program's first NAIA postseason victory with a 3-0 win against Columbia (Missouri) in the 2018 Opening Round to advance to the Round of 16 and national championship final site. The Grizzlies collected a 3-2 double-overtime victory against Trinity Christian (Illinois) during the 2019 Opening Round. It marked the team's third straight national tournament appearance.


Georgia Gwinnett posted a 15-6-1 record in 2019, marking the second most wins in program history. The Grizzlies defeated Viterbo (Wisconsin) 2-0 to win their third straight A.I.I. title. Earlier in the season the team picked up a 1-0 home victory against No. 5 Lindsey Wilson (Kentucky). Defender Joy Mertzig enjoyed one of the top seasons in the program's history with a record 17 goals and 39 points, the second most recorded in a single season. Mertzig was named the A.I.I. Player of the Year and a third-team NAIA All-American. Her NAIA individual honor marked the first time in program history a GGC player was named within one of the three NAIA All-America teams. She also received the A.I.I. Tournament's Most Outstanding Player after scoring both goals in the title match against Viterbo. Sophie Hoare received the A.I.I. Goalkeeper of the Year award and became the program's career leader for wins during the season. Jenny Stadin rounded out the individual honors as the Newcomer of the Year. The 2019 team featured 16 freshmen.


The 2018 season was a record-setting campaign for GGC behind a single-season 17 victories. GGC also achieved a 3-2 overtime victory against No. 1-ranked William Carey (Mississipi) to mark the program's first win over a top-ranked team. The team also registered wins over nationally ranked opponents in No. 10 Lindsey Wilson, No. 15 Tennessee Wesleyan and No. 17 Mobile (Alabama). GGC relied on a stingy defensive unit behind a single-season school-record 13 shutouts. Defender Stina Andersson led the unit and was named the A.I.I. Player of the Year, while Elisa Randel earned the Goalkeeper of the Year award.


He led the Grizzlies to the A.I.I. title in 2020-21, winning eight of their final 12 matches. The team defeated Thomas (Georgia) in penalty kicks for the conference championship. Addie Adame was named the most outstanding player at the 2020-21 A.I.I. tournament. GGC reached the national tournament for the fourth straight season and traveled to Indiana Wesleyan for the postseason. Natalie Ferrin received honorable mention NAIA All-America team accolades, marking the seventh All-American under Giuliano's guidance on the sideline.


Dr. Mike Giuliano made an immediate impact during his first season on the sidelines leading the Georgia Gwinnett College women's soccer program. The Grizzlies captured the 2017 Association of Independent Institutions title and finished the season ranked No. 19 in the NAIA. The 14 wins tied the program's top mark and GGC made its second appearance in the NAIA Opening Round.


Giuliano, who possesses nearly 30 years of successful head coaching experience at the NAIA and NCAA levels, has eight various national coach of the year accolades to his name and was the first coach in National Soccer Coaches Association of America history to earn three consecutive NSCAA/adidas National Coach of the Year awards.


Giuliano brings a wealth of collegiate experience to Georgia Gwinnett, with stints at Wheaton College (Ill.), San Diego State University (Calif.), Westmont College (California), Santa Barbara City College (California), and Trinity Christian College (Illinois).


From 1993-2003, Giuliano developed Westmont into an NAIA women’s soccer powerhouse, producing a 194-42-15 record in 11 seasons while winning four NAIA national titles in five years. Westmont reached nine NAIA national tournaments under Giuliano, including one in each of his final eight seasons. On four occasions, Giuliano was named both the NSCAA/adidas National Coach of the Year and the NAIA Coach of the Year. In his final five seasons at the NAIA level, he led Westmont to a 97-11-7 record and did not lose in his final 59 regulation matches. During the same five-year span, Westmont went 17-0-1 in the NAIA national tournament.


During Giuliano's tenure at Westmont, the school produced three NAIA National Players of the Year, 14 All-Americans, and 16 scholar-athletes. He also helped coach 55 all-Golden State Athletic Conference selections, including three GSAC Players of the Year.


At NCAA Division III Wheaton, Giuliano led the men’s soccer program to a runner-up finish in the national championship in 2014, six total NCAA tournament appearances and seven conference championships in the College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin.


Prior to Wheaton, Giuliano spent three seasons at NCAA Division I San Diego State.


Giuliano also previously started the women's soccer program at Santa Barbara City College and spent five years coaching the Trinity men's soccer team, winning one district coach-of-the-year honor.


Most recently, Giuliano guided GAC to a Georgia High School Association state championship in 2015 and a state semifinals appearance in 2016.


Giuliano played college soccer at Tennessee Temple University in Chattanooga and went on to earn a bachelor's degree in communications from TTU in 1981. He received his master's degree in education in 1987 at Trinity International University (Ill.) and earned a Ph.D. in communications from Northwestern University (Ill.) in 1993.


Giuliano and his wife, Barbara, reside in Suwanee. They have three children, Joshua, Justin, and Linnae.

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Andrea Kaminski

Andrea Kaminski enters her sixth season as the assistant coach of Georgia Gwinnett College’s women's soccer program in 2020.


A former standout NCAA Division I goalkeeper, Kaminski helps coordinate the Grizzly defense and goalkeepers, as well as assists head coach Dr. Mike Giuliano with recruiting, training and day-to-day operations of the program.


She has mentored the last two Association of Independent Institutions Goalkeeper of the Year award winners with Sophie Hoare honored during the 2019 season and Elisa Randel named following the 2018 campaign. Over the last two seasons the Grizzlies have posted a 32-10-1 record.


Kaminski has helped lead GGC to three A.I.I. titles (2019, 2018 and 2017) -- the first conference championships in program history. The 2018 squad won a single-season school-record 17 matches and captured the program's first NAIA national tournament victory with a 3-0 home triumph against Columbia (Mo.) in the Opening Round. The Round of 16 appearance in 2018 marked the deepest postseason run in program history.


She helped the 2019 team tally 15 victories and advance to the Opening Round title match behind a 3-2 double-overtime victory against Trinity Christian (Ill.). The Grizzlies registered a 1-0 home victory against No. 5 Lindsey Wilson (Ky.). GGC did not allow a goal during five October matches.


In 2017, Kaminski led the GGC defense to nine shutouts and the program's first conference championship. The Grizzlies defeated two nationally ranked opponents, earning triumphs against No. 23 Cumberland (Tenn.) and No. 23 Jamestown (N.D.). The win against Jamestown gave the Grizzlies the Association of Independent Institutions title and berth to the NAIA national tournament. Goalkeeper Sophie Hoare earned first A.I.I. team honors.


She guided the Grizzlies to their fifth-consecutive double-digit-win season at 10-7-2 in 2016. The defensive unit posted four shutouts as the Grizzlies outscored their opponents by a 50-30 margin.


During 2015, Kaminski’s first year at GGC, she helped guide the Grizzly defense to five shutouts en route to a 10-win season.


Prior to arriving at GGC, Kaminski spent the previous four seasons on the staff at NCAA Division III Capital University (Ohio), helping the team to three conference championships and a berth into the national semifinals in 2013. She helped Crusaders goalkeeper Maggie Donnellan collect three consecutive conference goalkeeper of the year awards as well as a pair of all-region honors and an NSCAA All-America designation.


Kaminski boasts a wealth of playing experience, beginning with a record-breaking career in goal for the University of Cincinnati. In her four years with the Bearcats, she logged 6,713 minutes in goal and graduated as the school’s all-time saves leader (407), leading the Big East Conference in the category in both 2006 and 2009.


Following her collegiate career, Kaminski competed for the West Virginia Illusion of the W-League and spent time coaching for former U.S. Women’s National Team coach Tony DiCicco with his Soccer Plus Goalkeepeing School.


Kaminski graduated from Cincinnati in 2010 with a degree in special education. She is a native of Indiana.

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Steve De Cou

Georgia Gwinnett College named coaching veteran Steve DeCou its first-ever head men’s soccer coach in January of 2012, and in the time since, he has developed the Grizzlies into one of the nation’s top teams. DeCou’s first 11 GGC squads have posted a combined 136-45-20 record, with five Association of Independent Institutions championship titles. DeCou has led GGC into the NAIA national tournament nine times and produced 15 NAIA All-American selections, 20 NSCAA All-Region performers, and had 12 players earn NAIA Scholar-Athlete distinction.


Through the 2022 season, DeCou owns a career 257-137-35 head coaching record over 23 years, as his career includes previous stints at Belhaven (Mississippi) from 2007-11, Trinity Christian (Illinois) from 2004-06 and Huntington (Indiana) from 2000-03.


DeCou’s Georgia Gwinnett squads posted double-digit-win seasons in each of his first nine years in Lawrenceville and are consistently in the NAIA Top 25 picture. DeCou led the Grizzlies to an incredibly quick start, highlighted by back-to-back A.I.I. championships and NAIA tournament berths in the first two years of the program’s eligibility, as he was recognized as A.I.I. Coach of the Year in 2013 and the NSCAA Independent Coach of the Year in 2013 and 2014.


DeCou guided GGC to its first NAIA Opening Round victory and trip to the NAIA national championship tournament in Delray Beach, Florida in 2017. The Grizzlies defeated Southern Oregon in the NAIA Opening Round and then picked up a victory against Vanguard (California) to reach the quarterfinal round. GGC ended the fall campaign ranked No. 8 in the NAIA and reached a program-high No. 5 ranking during the season. DeCou earned the A.I.I. Coach of the Year honors. Samuel Sampaio Gomes was named the program's first CoSIDA Academic All-America selection.


GGC matched its highest Top 25 ranking during the 2022 season by reaching No. 5 in the nation during the final poll. The Grizzlies posted a 14-3-2 season and advanced to the quarterfinal round of the national tournament. DeCou led the team to postseason triumphs against Vanguard and Columbia College (Missouri) during the Lawrenceville Bracket of the NAIA First & Second. Karim Tmimi garnered first-team All-American accolades and became the program's leading goal scorer in 2022.


The Grizzlies advanced to the final site in Irving, California in 2018 with a 3-0 victory at Southeastern (Florida) during the NAIA Opening Round. GGC captured the program's fourth A.I.I. title when it scored two second-half goals to defeat Bellevue (Nebraska) at the Grizzly Soccer Complex. Defender Andrew White became the program's inaugural first-team All-American as a defender by the NAIA.


In 2019, Georgia Gwinnett College collected its 100th victory in program history during another A.I.I. championship season. The Grizzlies defeated Bellevue 2-1 in overtime on a goal by Krishna Clarke in the 94th minute to win the program's fifth conference title. GGC defeated Life (Georgia) 3-2 behind a goal from Ian Aramburu in the 89th minute during the NAIA Opening Round Lawrenceville Bracket to advance to the Round of 16 for the third consecutive season. Midfielder Toni Tiente was named the A.I.I. Player of the Year and garnered third NAIA All-America team accolades. Matija Gligorovic earned the Goalkeeper of the Year award by the A.I.I. and also was recognized as a honorable mention All-American. Forward Krishna Clarke rounded out the honorees on the NAIA honorable mention All-America team. Midfielder Alfredo Rivera was recognized as a second Academic All-America team selection by CoSIDA, marking the second member in program history to be recognized for athletic and academic success.


DeCou led GGC to its first unbeaten regular season and a top-10 national ranking during the 2020-21 campaign. The team posted a 10-2-2 record and hosted the NAIA Opening Round. Tiente garnered first NAIA All-America team accolades as a midfielder, while Gianmaria Fiore earned second-team All-America honors. Gligorovic and Tmimi received honorable mention All-America recognition for the 2020-21 season.


The 2016 campaign saw DeCou lead the Grizzlies to the program’s third NAIA tournament berth in four seasons, an A.I.I. title and a 13-4-3 record. Led by four-year-senior and A.I.I. Player of the Year Lewis Sharpe in goal, the GGC defense was incredibly stingy, finishing seventh in the NAIA with 12 shutouts on the year. DeCou also assembled a host of attackers to lead the offense, as 11 different players notched goals for the Grizzlies. The season featured a win over then-No. 4 Thomas (Georgia) away from home, part of a 12-match unbeaten streak. Georgia Gwinnett posted five players on the All-A.I.I. First Team, leading all schools. The Grizzlies rolled by Fisher (Massachusetts) and Johnson & Wales (Colorado) in shutout fashion in Denver, Colorado, to claim their third A.I.I. title in four seasons. At season’s end, Sharpe and Sampaio Gomes earned NAIA All-American honorable mention recognition.


In 2015, the Grizzlies tallied double-digit wins for the fourth season in-a-row, capturing 10 victories. The Grizzlies featured another tough defense in 2015, yielding just 1.4 goals per game on the season. Sharpe was stellar in net all season long, helping secure five shutouts for GGC. The Grizzlies surrendered fewer than two goals in 10 games on the year, as countless contests would come down to the wire all season. Not only were three ties a new single-season high for GGC, but of the remaining 16 games during the year, 10 were decided by just one goal. Offensively, 10 different Grizzlies found the back of the net on the year as GGC outscored its opponents in total, 38-26.


In 2014, the Grizzlies continued to progress on a national level, including a program-best No. 7 national ranking during the regular season before ultimately ending the year at No. 19, marking the second consecutive season that GGC culminated with a top 20 NAIA ranking. With wins over a pair of top 15 opponents during the regular season, the focus once again turned to the A.I.I. Championship, which would take place in a frigid Clinton, Iowa. Battling temperatures that often dropped below 10 degrees, the Grizzlies beat No. 25 Cal State San Marcos in the semifinal on a goal just moments shy of the whistle in the second overtime, and returned a day later to pick up a snowy 2-1 win over Houston-Victoria to become the first A.I.I. program to hoist the league trophy in back-to-back seasons since 2010. Following the match, GGC hosted its first-ever NAIA Opening Round for men’s soccer, where the season would end with a loss against eventual national semifinalist Northwestern Ohio.


In 2013, the A.I.I. championship wasn’t quite as dramatic as it was eye-opening. After dispatching CSUSM in the semis, the Grizzlies ran rampant over third-ranked Ashford (Iowa) in the final, winning 3-0 on their home field in Lawrenceville to claim the school’s first-ever trophy in any sport in dominating fashion. Georgia Gwinnett’s A.I.I. title sent the squad to the NAIA Opening Round for the first time, where a second-half penalty kick by host and 13th-ranked Embry-Riddle (Florida) ended GGC’s season in a 1-0 loss. The 15-5 year was filled with plenty of highlights, including an eight-match unbeaten streak heading into the NAIA tournament. GGC knocked off perennial power Auburn-Montgomery (Alabama) on the road by a 1-0 score Sep. 11. The win over the 16th-ranked Warhawks stood as the first victory in program history over a ranked opponent for DeCou’s Grizzlies, a feat they would duplicate just two days later with a 3-2 overtime victory at #24 SCAD Savannah. DeCou was named the A.I.I.’s Coach of the Year for 2013.


In his first year guiding the Grizzlies program in 2012, DeCou led GGC to a fantastic season. DeCou’s Grizzlies opened the school’s inaugural 2012 campaign with a 12-0 victory over Tennessee Temple on Aug. 25, and remained in charge all season long, reaching six- and five-game winning streaks on the year. The team posted a stellar 15-2-1 final record, while going 7-1-1 at home in Lawrenceville. With less than eight months to recruit a team, create a schedule and launch his program, DeCou’s success surpassed expectations in year one as GGC dominated its opponents with a 93-9 scoring advantage. Senior goalkeeper Greg Hartley, a former NAIA All-American who chose to play his final collegiate season for DeCou after spending 2011 with him at Belhaven, allowed just eight goals all year in over 1,200 minutes for the Grizzlies. The GGC defense posted 11 shutouts (including a string of five straight) and did not allow more than two goals in a game. DeCou also guided senior forward Tom Butler to a season that won’t soon be repeated. Butler scored 28 goals and piled up 65 points to establish his name in the Grizzly record books. Five different Grizzlies posted 20 or more points on the season while 13 separate players tallied a goal. The Grizzlies’ lone home defeat came to the #1-rated MRPI team, Auburn-Montgomery, as GGC battled AUM to a hard-fought 1-0 loss Oct. 6. That game opened the Grizzlies’ beautiful new synthetic turf field, a place DeCou’s squad would win its final four games of the year.


DeCou came to GGC from Belhaven University in Jackson, Mississippi, where he had the Blazers competing as a national power. During his tenure at Belhaven, DeCou posted five consecutive winning seasons (66-23-7 overall), and he led the Blazers to top 25 finishes in the final NAIA poll from 2009-11, while the 2010 and 2011 teams ranked in the top 10. DeCou coached his teams to the Round of 16 in the NAIA National Tournament for the 2010 and 2011 seasons. Six players were selected as NAIA All-Americans, 10 players were named Academic All-Americans, 22 players were All-Conference selections, one was awarded the 2010 Southern States Athletic Conference Newcomer of the Year and one was named the 2011 SSAC Defensive Player of the Year.


Prior to his time at Belhaven, DeCou spent 2004-06 at Trinity Christian College in Palos Heights, Illinois, where he led the Trolls to a 27-28-4 record. His three-year stint was highlighted by a 13-8-2 season in 2005 that saw Trinity Christian selected to the National Christian College Athletic Association Tournament.


From 2000-03, DeCou served as head coach of Huntington College in Huntington, Indiana, guiding the Foresters to their first winning campaign in eight years in 2001.


Including his 2013 recognition at GGC, DeCou has been named Conference/Association Coach of the Year four times. He was named SSAC Coach of the Year in 2010, following a 16-2-3 season, the 2008 Gulf Coast Athletic Conference Coach of the Year, following a 14-4-1 campaign and the Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference Coach of the Year in 2005, following a 13-8-2 season.


DeCou is a graduate of Tennessee Temple University in Chattanooga, Tennessee, where he played soccer and earned his bachelor’s degree in physical education. He holds a master’s in sports medicine from the United States Sports Academy. He holds a USSF “A” license and earned the NSCAA Premier Diploma in January 2014. He has served as president of the NAIA Men’s Soccer Association Executive Committee and is a member of the NAIA Ratings Oversight Committee, NAIA National Tournament Selection Committee and NAIA National Tournament Games Committee.


In addition to his involvement with NAIA soccer, DeCou spent three summers coaching in the United Soccer Leagues’ Premier Development League, serving as an assistant in 2006 and 2007 with the Chicago Fire Premier and as head coach of Mississippi Brilla FC in 2008.


The move to Georgia Gwinnett College brought DeCou closer to family as his wife, Amy, is originally from Georgia, and his parents are located in Charleston, South Carolina. Steve and Amy DeCou are proud parents of their daughter, Sadie Jane.

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Stephen Magennis

Stephen Magennis enters his seventh season in 2022 as the Assistant Men's Soccer Coach at Georgia Gwinnett College. With the Grizzlies, Magennis' responsibilities include recruiting, coaching, training and supporting head coach Steve DeCou in the day-to-day operation of the men's soccer program.


Magennis has helped lead the Grizzlies to four NAIA national tournament appearances and three Association of Independent Institutions championships. The team has posted a 71-26-13 record over the last six seasons and earned three NAIA national championship final site appearances (2019, 2018 and 2017). The 2017 season featured the program's first NAIA postseason victory with a home triumph against Southern Oregon in the NAIA Opening Round.


The Grizzlies captured A.I.I. titles in 2019 and 2018 with both championships coming against Bellevue (Neb.).


The 2017 season saw GGC reach the quarterfinal round of the NAIA national tournament, defeating Vanguard in the Round of 16 in Delray Beach, Fla. The Grizzlies ended the season ranked No. 8 in the NAIA after holding the program's highest ranking in program history at No. 5 during the regular season.


His first season with the program in 2016 brought GGC its third A.I.I. title. The Grizzlies went 13-4-3 on the year and played in the NAIA national tournament for the third time in four seasons.


Magennis joined the Grizzlies after serving as the assistant coach for the Lander University (S.C.) men's soccer program for three seasons. During his coaching tenure with the NCAA Division II Bearcats, Magennis helped guide Lander to the regular season Peach Belt Conference Championship in 2012. Prior to coaching at Lander, Magennis was a member of the Bearcats' soccer team, where he was an integral part of Lander's 2009 Peach Belt Tournament Championship squad.


A native of Dublin, Ireland, Magennis spent his first two collegiate seasons at Darton State College (Ga.). He earned a bachelor of arts in exercise science from Lander in December 2009.


Coupled with his collegiate coaching experiences, Magennis spent time with the New Orleans Jesters of the National Premier Soccer League as their first assistant coach and director of operations (2009-2010).


Magennis holds a USSF A License, NSCAA Premier Diploma, and Football Association of Ireland Level 1 and 2 coaching certificates.

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