If he had enough free time, Dave Cosgrove could write a captivating book on the heartfelt topic: âHow I Paid My Dues Before Winning the Big One.â
Pima Collegeâs menâs soccer coach was a young man on the Aztecsâ powerhouse 1988 team that reached the NJCAA national finals only to lose in the final minutes. Eleven years later, this time as his alma materâs head coach, Cosgrove again reached the NJCAA finals, this time losing to Iowaâs State Fair Community College.
It wasnât that the Aztecs were outmanned, itâs that they were, shall we say, outwitted. State Fairâs star player, later part of the United States menâs national team, was subsequently declared ineligible when the NJCAA ruled he had been allowed to play only after an imposter took his GED eligibility test.
The NJCAA stripped SFCC of its championship, but Pima College remains the victim. The NJCAA still lists Pima College as the 1999 runner-up.
âIt took me 30 years,â Cosgrove said Monday evening, speaking loudly so he could be heard over the cacophony in the West Campus gymnasium, where 500 people gathered to celebrate perhaps the greatest day in the history of PCC sports.
âIâm glad Iâm not a bitter man. It all worked out. This is a special day, one Iâll never forget.â
Pima College soccer coach Dave Cosgrove pauses while thanking his wife during a celebration for the Aztecsâ soccer teams on Monday night. The Aztecs men won the national championship in a shootout, while the womenâs team lost the title match in a shootout.
In 2018, Cosgroveâs Aztecs broke through and won the Big One. National champs. In the coaching career of most people, that could never be one-upped or share a place in the heart.
But last Saturday in Wichita, Kansas, Cosgrove coached Pima College to its second NJCAA menâs soccer championship on the same day the PCC womenâs team went to overtime before finishing No. 2 to Heartland (Kansas) Community College.
âThat had never been done in the history of NJCAA soccer,â PCC athletic director Jim Monaco said Monday. âNo school had ever had a menâs team and a womenâs team in the championship games in the same season. This is incredibly special.â
Cosgrove has come to understand there is a two-way meaning of special. One was winning the second national championship. A second was watching coach Kendra Velizâs No. 2 finishers putting their disappointment aside, stand on the sideline and exhort the PCC menâs team to its victory.
âMy heart ached for (Velizâs) kids,â said Cosgrove. âBut the way they showed up to support us just overwhelmed me. It was one of the most inspirational things Iâve seen in my lifetime.â
Pima College's women's soccer team walks into the gymnasium along with coach Kendra Veliz, right, during a celebration for the Aztecs' soccer programs at the West Campus gym.
As soon as PCC standout Francisco Manzo, a sophomore from Salpointe Catholic High School, scored the gameâs deciding free kick, he bee-lined to the sideline and was engulfed by the PCC womenâs team. Both teams danced and laughed and celebrated together.
And that wasnât the end of the shared joy.
Cosgroveâs son, Conner, a sophomore from Catalina Foothills High School, missed his final year of eligibility with a serious knee injury. Yet Conner accompanied his father and his teammates to Wichita last week and took part in the epic celebration after the Aztecsâ stunning penalty-kicks victory over No, 1 Essex College of Maryland.
âWhen Conner hoisted the trophy, it was pretty emotional,â his father says.
Dave Cosgrove has coached PCC to more than 400 soccer victories, which is No. 4 among active NJCAA coaches. He has already been inducted into the NJCAA Soccer Hall of Fame and along the way replaced rival and long-dominant Yavapai College â a seven-time NJCAA champion â as the standard of excellence in junior-college soccer west of the Mississippi.
Pima College women's soccer coach Kendra Veliz addresses the crowd during Monday night's celebration.
Pimaâs soccer programs win without the inducements that those like Essex College and the other NJCAA soccer powers enjoy. They do not offer dormitories and free lodging to their athletes. They do not offer free meal plans.
âWe do not have a big war chest,â says Cosgrove.
Itâs remarkable that Velizâs womenâs team was able to play Kansasâ Heartland Community College to overtime in the NJCAA finals. The Kansas team has 10 European players and eight from Texas. Velizâs 20-woman roster was an all-Southern Arizona squad.
âIt was quite a journey,â says Veliz, who won her 250th career game this season, the most among womenâs coaches in ACCAC history. Her four all-ACCAC players â Salpointeâs Angelina Amparano, Sahuaroâs Nayeli VIdal, Sabinoâs Kaitlyn Bassett and Sahuaritaâs Mari Acosta â are all local.
Cosgroveâs leading player, Sam Loussou, the ACCAC player of the year, is from Rincon/University. Twenty of Pimaâs 25 players are from the greater Tucson area. Those familiar faces took down No. 1 Essex, whose roster included five players from Japan and another from Africa.
âWhen you win with local kids, it makes it that much more special,â said Monaco. âThatâs the fabric of our school.â
Velizâs journey to the NJCAA finals basically took 35 years. She was a high school all-star at Sahuaro, one of the elite players from the foundational Fort Lowell Sidewinders youth team that essentially kick-started womenâs soccer in Tucson. Two of her teammates, Erin Fahey and Kelly Walbert, became All-Americans and professional soccer players.
Veliz played four years at Boston College, returned home, got married and became PCCâs womenâs soccer coach in 2002. She was the ACCAC coach of the year in her first season and has been so five times. Along the way she had two kids and overcame a frightening battle against breast cancer.
Last week in Kansas, her team was one play shy of a national championship. It promoted both tears of sadness and tears of joy, but, as Veliz said Monday, âmore than anything, it was a special feeling and a bond among teammates that will never go away.â
Photos: Pima soccer teams celebrate NJCAA championship victories
Pima Community College, soccer, 2021
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Men's soccer players hoist the NJCAA National Championship trophy during a celebration for the Pima Community College men's and momen's soccer teams at PCC-West Campus on Nov. 22, 2021.
Pima Community College, soccer, 2021
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The women's soccer team walks into the gymnasium along with coach Kendra Veliz, right, during a celebration for the Pima Community College men's and momen's soccer teams at PCC-West Campus on Nov. 22, 2021.
Pima Community College, soccer, 2021
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Kendra Veliz, Pima Community College women's soccer coach, during a celebration for the Pima Community College men's and women's soccer teams at PCC-West Campus on Nov. 22, 2021.
Pima Community College, soccer, 2021
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Men's soccer coach Dave Cosgrove pauses while thanking his wife during a celebration for the Pima Community College men's and momen's soccer teams at PCC-West Campus on Nov. 22, 2021.
Pima Community College, soccer, 2021
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Soccer coach Dave Cosgrove, flanked by men's and women's teams, during a celebration for the Pima Community College men's and momen's soccer teams at PCC-West Campus on Nov. 22, 2021.
Pima Community College, soccer, 2021
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Pima men's soccer players, from left, Emerson Ram, Jesus Virgen, Sam Lossou, Nicolai Moholt, Saul Lopez and Brian Vu during a celebration for the Pima Community College men's and momen's soccer teams at PCC-West Campus on Nov. 22, 2021.
Pima Community College, soccer, 2021
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Coach Dave Cosgrove recognizes the game-saving efforts of goalie Juan Suarez during a celebration for the Pima Community College men's and momen's soccer teams at PCC-West Campus on Nov. 22, 2021.
Pima Community College, soccer, 2021
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Soccer coach Dave Cosgrove hugs Sam Lossou during a celebration for the Pima Community College men's and momen's soccer teams at PCC-West Campus on Nov. 22, 2021.



