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You are here: Home / Archives for UMass Women’s Soccer

On hanging tough: Comendul goes from stopping goals to scoring one for UMass women’s soccer

November 29, 2018 By Nate Rollins, Express Sports Correspondent

Ari Comendul. / Photo by: Doug Keller

Ari Comendul convereted to a midfielder for her senior season.


All Ari Comendul could do was watch.

After her first three seasons on the UMass women’s soccer team, she received zero playing time.

“I had a lot of trouble breaking through that starting [goalkeeper] position,” said Comendul, who hails from Whitman.

The constant commitment to practice, with no results to show for it, began to take a toll on her.

“Everyone thinks of quitting at one point,” said Comendul, who began playing soccer at age 5. “It was hard. It was a grind every day, and no matter how much money you’re on, you really question if it’s worth it.”

Not playing was uncharted territory for Comendul, who, as a senior and the starting goalkeeper, helped lead the Whitman-Hanson Regional High girls’ soccer team to the Div. 1 state finals in 2014. But a position change was anything but new to her. She didn’t step into goal until the middle of her junior season in high school, when she converted from forward.

“I honestly think we were at halftime, and I think our goalkeeper got hurt and our coach was like, ‘Who wants to go in net?’” recalled Comendul. “And for some reason my hand just shot up, and then I went in and I did well.”

So, with experience as a goalkeeper and forward stemming from high school, Comendul made the switch to midfielder this past spring in advance of her senior season at UMass. First-year Minutewomen head coach Jason Dowiak was the one who suggested the move.

“Having three goalkeepers, it’s tough to share the minutes,” Dowiak said. “I knew Ari had a little bit of experience playing the field and we just talked about it really. Weasked her if she was interested in the idea and she was more than interested, she was excited about it.”

After playing half the game in the field at first, she received significant minutes in UMass’ final spring bout against Holy Cross.

“We were just really light on numbers, and she ended up playing really well,” Dowiak said. “She was really productive and grasped a lot of the concepts we had been talking about.”

Dowiak said Comedul’s position change shone a light on two of her best attributes: unselfishness and leadership.

“She’s willing to kind of play whatever rolethe team needed,” he said. “I think she set a great tone for the mentality of the ‘Do what’s best for the team.’” Comendul didn’t just make the switch, but she was pretty effective as a field player as well. The biochemistry and molecular biology major played 278 minutes and had a goal and an assist on the season for UMass, which finished 11-6-1, surpassing the 10-win mark for the first time since 2011.

“It’s just a cool story,” Dowiak said. “You never hear about a goalkeeper changing positions and then becoming really impactful on the field. As a wing player, she made herself dangerous and she made players around her dangerous. She had a really good eye for the final pass. I’d say we missed some really good opportunities that she created.”

The goal came in the fifth game of the season Sept. 7 in an 8-0 victory over Chicago State. “It was funny,” Comendul said. “It was just awesome.”

Comendul said at times she felt like a freshman during the transition.

“My positioning was off a lot of the time, and it kind of just hit me one day that, ‘I need to stop trying to become a midfielder and just start being one and adopting the mentality of the position,’” she said.

Dowiak said it was Comendul’s intelligence, both on and off the field, that allowed her to succeed in the switch.

“She’s an incredibly gifted student,” Dowiak said. “She was able to process tactical information and ideas, as well if not better than most.”

When all was said and done, Comendul said she’s forever thankful she continued stick it out through the difficult times.

“I’m so happy I never quit,” she said. “I held that version to the past version of myself that I would stick it out and I did. I’m really grateful I ended on a high note.”

Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: Ari Comendul, College Check In, Feature/Profile, Jason Dowiak, UMass, UMass Women's Soccer, Whitman, Whitman-Hanson Regional High, Whitman-Hanson Regional High Girls' Soccer

Bonavita a score for UMass’ women’s soccer team

November 22, 2018 By Nate Rollins, Express Sports Correspondent

Bonavita against UMaine. / Courtesy photo: Thom Kendall Photography

Lauren Bonavita, of Hanson, put forth seven goals in her freshman campaign, which was tied for the team high.


When Jason Dowiak was announced head coach of UMass Amherst’s women’s soccer team last December, Lauren Bonavita was the first person he called.

Since Dowiak had not recruited the incoming class, he needed to find out more about the team’s incoming freshmen. Dowiak had a solid idea of just what Bonavita, coming off a 43-goal season and 113-goal soccer career at Whitman-Hanson Regional High, would bring to the team – a dynamic scoring presence. Further game footage sent over by Bonavita affirmed his thinking.

“I got to see three or four mostly high school games,” Dowiak said. “What was unique about Lauren was her knack for being able to create really good, quality scoring chances. I think in one of the high school games she sent me she scored four goals.”

During the spring, Bonavita, who hails from Hanson, impressed him, while playing for her club team FC Boston.

“I think out of four or five spring games that we watched her play, only one of those games did we walk away saying ‘Ah, we kind of expect more,'” Dowiak said. “All of the other games she was the best player on the field and it wasn’t even close, and she was scoring a boat load of goals. I think in a matter of seven or eight club games last year she had 13 goals and 13 assists.

“And we were tracking, we started watching and we were like, ‘OK, so she had two or three that game. She had three in this one and then she only had one goal in this game but she had three assists. Obviously we started getting really excited of what she’s capable of.” When the fall arrived, that goal scoring was on full display for Dowiak’s Minutewomen and played a key role in their turnaround.

Bonavita tied for a team-high seven goals and added five assists as UMass went 11-6-1. It marked a four-win improvement on 2017 and the team’s first season above 10 wins since 2011.

In the Minutewomen’s opener against Maine, Bonavita set the tone of the fall in the 36th minute with the first goal of the season. “It was very, very exciting,” she said. In the first four Atlantic 10 games, Bonavita notched a goal and two assists – including the winning pass in a 1-0 victory over St. Bonaventure on Sept. 27. Thanks to this, UMass began conference play 4-0 for the first time in over 10 years.

“It’s not like all scoring,” said Bonavita, who was selected to the A-10’s All-Rookie Team. “It’s about helping the team and making the right decisions and helping the team and passing it to an open player. I was just able to help the team push toward the win whether it was offensively ordefensively.”

Bonavita said the most important thing she learned at W-H that translates into the college level is conditioning.

“Our fitness with coach [Dave] Floeck would be the two-mile run in the summer and just making sure you’re working throughout the sum mer to get your fitness up,” she said.

Bonavita also noted competing in a rigorous Patriot League throughout high school helped her to compete at the next level.

“Definitely playing against those high-competitive teams kind of set me up, I mean college is completely different, but setting me up for what I’m going to be looking at in college,” Bonavita said. “But Duxbury, Silver Lake and Hingham all have like club players who are playing in college, so it was definitely a high-competitive game and then coming to UMass it was similar and everyone was working together.”

Thanks to her strong performance this fall, Dowiak said he is excited to watch Bonavita’s growth over the next three seasons.

“I think that we’ve got an amazing player on our hands that we can really develop into someone that can come out and be productive against just about anybody,” Dowiak said.

Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: College Check In, Feature/Profile, Jason Dowiak, Lauren Bonavita, Sports, UMass, UMass Women's Soccer, Whitman-Hanson Regional High Girls' Soccer

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