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Alex Crozier, Head Coach
Career Record of 235-119-36 (Entering 2011)
Four-time Big West Conference Coach of the Year
(1996, 1997, 2002, 2003)
1993 NCAA Division II National Coach of the Year
Seven Big West Championships
(1996, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2009)

Five Straight Winning Seasons (2002-2006)
Nine Straight Winning Seasons (1992-2000)

1993 CCAA Coach of the Year

Head Coach Alex Crozier returns for his 20th year at the helm of the Cal Poly women’s soccer program. He is the first and only coach since inception of intercollegiate play for the program in 1992.

After a 14-5-1 campaign in 2009 and Big West Championship, Crozier’s 2010 Mustangs returned to a 9-9-1 overall season, claiming the Big West Conference fith place regular-season spot. The 2010 Mustang squad finished 3-4-1 overall in the Big West conference. Three Mustangs players received All-Big West Team recognition including, Whitney Sisler earning second team, and Morgan Miller and Carrie Andrews receiving honorable mention.

Crozier is the leader of all active Cal Poly coaches in winning percentage. His teams have posted a 225-119-36 record in his previous 19 seasons, including a trip to the NCAA Division II finals in 1993.

Most recently, Crozier led the Mustangs to a Big West Championship title in 2009. The Mustangs were defeated in PK’s by UCSB concluding their overall season at 14-5-1. During the 2009 season, Cal Poly had top Big West Conference honors and six named to the All-Big West Conference team. Coral Hoover was named Goal Keeper of the Year, while Julianne Grinstead earned Defensive Player of the Year. Additionally, Carissa Voegele was picked for First Team while Morgan Miller and Julie Mckee placed Second Team, and Cici Kobinski received honorable mention.

Hooverand Grinstead were also named to the NCSAA All-West Region Second Team.

The 1999 campaign was a landmark season for Crozier and his Mustangs. A 12-8 regular season along with a Big West title and a win in the NCAA Division I Tournament made for a memorable season. The team defeated Fresno State in the first round, before falling to Stanford in round two.

The 2000 season marked a second consecutive Big West title and another trip to the NCAA Tournament. Crozier’s team finished 11-7-1, led by a stellar defense and 10 goals from Schlegel.

Crozier has earned Big West Conference Coach of the Year four times, earning the honor in Cal Poly’s first season as a member of the Big West in 1996 and sharing the award in 1997 with Pacific’s Keith Coleman. Crozier also earned the award in 2002 and 2003.

Crozier has helped build the Mustangs into a power, both in the Big West and on the national stage. In 1997, Cal Poly claimed the Big West regular season championship and cracked the National Soccer Coaches Association of America/Umbro Top 25 national ranking. The Mustangs also appeared in the top five in the West Region in 1997, finally settling for a No. 8 regional ranking, ahead of such teams as Stanford and California.

In Cal Poly’s first season as a member of the Big West, the Mustangs made an immediate impact, claiming the league’s tournament championship in 1996.

Prior to joining the Big West Conference, the Mustangs played as an independent for two years after jumping to the NCAA Division I level from Division II in 1994. Under Crozier, Cal Poly racked up a combined 29-6-3 record in those two seasons as an independent, barely missing the NCAA Tournament both years. In 1994 the Mustangs were 14-3-2, and the next year, Cal Poly was 15-3-1.

In Cal Poly’s first four seasons as a Division I program, Crozier’s squad had a glossy 56-21-4 record. In the Mustangs’ first two seasons of existence, they made their mark on the NCAA Division II stage. In the inaugural season, Cal Poly was 10-6-2. Of those six losses, four were to Division I teams, and the Mustangs’ six matches against Division I opponents were the most of any Division II squad in the United States. The Mustangs proved they could play with anyone, regardless of the level of competition, when they tied national powerhouse Santa Clara.

In 1993, Cal Poly’s final season at Division II, Crozier led the Mustangs to the national championship match and earned national Coach of the Year honors.

Prior to beginning the Cal Poly program, Crozier, a 1984 Cal Poly graduate with a civil engineering degree, was an assistant at Santa Clara for one season. From 1989-91, he coached the West Valley F.C. Premier U-19 girls to the State Cup Championship and a third-place national finish. He coached the Cal Poly women’s soccer team from 1979-83 when it was a club sport competing in the California Collegiate Women’s Soccer Conference.

Crozier’s playing career included four years at Cal Poly and three seasons at Bullard High in Fresno. Bullard won CIF-Central Section titles all three seasons and Crozier was the team captain and earned team MVP and all-league honors in 1979. At Cal Poly, Crozier was team captain in 1982 and 1983 under Wolfgang Gartner, earned all-conference honors in 1982 and 1883 and was All-Far West Region in 1982.

Crozier’s coaching impact is felt by other programs around the nation.

Dan Tobias, former head coach at Arizona, served as an assistant to Crozier. Wendy Jones, an assistant at Boise State, is a former player and coach under Crozier and Tobias.

Crozier resides in San Luis Obispo with his wife, Judy King, and the couple’s two sons, Danny,  and Robert, and one daughter, Angela.

 

Bob Galarneau, Assistant Coach
10th Season

2009 NSCAA National License Director of Coaching
Director of Coaching SLO Soccer Club
Current Head Coach GU15 Premier: 2010 Cal South State Champions
Two years at Mission College Prep Boys Soccer
2010 Div 4 Undefeated CIF Champions 23-0-0

Bob Galarneau is in his tenth season as an assistant coach for Alex Crozier at Cal Poly. He served as goalkeeper coach from 2000-2004, took a year off and rejoined the Mustangs in 2006.

Galarneau has an NSCAA National Soccer Coaching License (2000), NSCAA CA State Goalkeeping Coaching License (2004), NSCAA Advanced Regional Youth Diploma (2006) and a USSF National “C” Soccer Coaching License (2006).

As a player, Galarneau played four years for Chicopee High School and was named an NSCAA All-American. He then played for four years at Springfield College where he was an NEISL All-Region selection. Galarneau finished off his playing days with a seven year stint for Lusitano Portuguese America FC from 1980-86. He earned a B.S. in Health, Physical Education and Recreation with a minor in Athletic Training and Coaching Methods while at Springfield College.

Galarneau is currently the Director of Coaching for the San Luis Obispo Soccer Club and the head coach for SLOSC Fire Boys Under 16 and Storm Girls Under-18. He also works as a personal chef and proprietor for The Wayfaring Chef. In 1992, Galarneau earned a Professional Culinary Diploma for classic French cuisine from the Connecticut Culinary Institute in Hartford, Conn.

 

Kathleen Lemieux, Assistant Coach
 Third Season

Kathleen Lemieux, a graduate of UC Irvine and a four-year letter winner on the Anteaters’ women’s soccer team, is in her third season as an assistant coach with the Cal Poly program.

Lemieux was a team captain as a senior in 2008 and earned Big West Scholar Athlete honors four times and was team defensive MVP in 2007 and 2008. She earned All-Big West honorable mention in 2007 and helped lead the Anteaters’ defense to 10 shutouts in 2007.

Lemieux made the Dean’s Honor List at UC Irvine for 10 quarters, graduating with Latin Honors in June 2009 with a bachelor’s degree in psychology. She was a member of the golden Key Honor Society.

During offseasons Lemieux has served as a counselor for Mr. Soccer Camps, a residential camp counselor and a personal soccer trainer. She has served as a volunteer coach for the Soccer for Hope Organization and the American Youth Soccer Organization.

 

Axel Thibodeau, Volunteer Assistant Coach
Second Season

Axel Thibodeau, who has nine years of coaching experience at the youth, high school and collegiate levels, is in his second season as a volunteer assistant coach at Cal Poly.

Thibodeau was an assistant men's soccer coach at Juneau Douglas High School in 2008 and 2010, a volunteer assistant men's coach at Whitworth University in the fall of 2007, a men's assistant coach at Ferris High School in Spokane, Wash., in the spring of 2007 and was head coach of the Under-13 Reign and the Under-12 Torment in the Juneau Soccer Club in 2005 and 2008.

Thibodeau worked as a youth coach in the Thunder Mountain Soccer Camps in Juneau from 2001-08.

He is a 2008 graduate of Gonzaga University with a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering, accumulating a 3.46 grade-point average.