Small crowds, 16-hour van trips and a shoestring budget: UMass women's team at practice The Latest Big Kick U.S. colleges adopt the world's most popular sport SPORTS major who stops shots just fine at 6 feet, 165. And you can't beat the exercise: 90 minutes of organized running up and down the 120-yard pitch. "The physical dangers aren't as great," says Frank Longo, execu- tive secretary of the Intercollegiate Soccer Association of America. "But it's still rough enough that it's not a sissy game." Recognition, please: University and fan sup- port, while growing, remains uneven. In- diana has access to a private plane now, a $4 million stadium and its own cheerlead- ing squad. But UMass, despite a women's team that has reached the Division I Final Four the last four years, draws only about 50 fans to a regular-season game. When the team organized seven years ago, it played on a virtual swamp. The UMass women now share a dry field with the men but still take van trips, some as long as 16 hours, to matches in North Carolina or Virginia. "We're not asking for million- dollar contracts here. We're asking for [more] recognition," says UMass coach Kalekeni Banda. Soccer also suffers from a culture gap. Foreign athletes who come to the United States to study and play often hold a strate- gic advantage over their American coun- terparts. "In Europe, soccer is a way of life. The media coverage and the fanaticism are greater," says Arni Arnthorsson, an Ice- lander who plays for South Carolina. U.S. colleges can face problems blending athletes from different countries into teams. Europeans play a rough, aggressive game, while Latin Americans depend more on speed and finesse, according to Longo. Not long ago, the colleges that won were those with the foreign stars. Then last De- cember, a milestone was reached in U.S. collegiate soccer: a nearly all-American squad of Duke Blue Devils beat Akron, with its core of English, Irish and Scottish play- ers, to capture the NCAA championship. CHRISTOPHER M. BELLITTO with PAUL ROGERS in Bloomington, JOSEPH GALARNEAU in Greensboro, NANCY KLINGENER in Amherst and bureau reports IrTA-nVQ" 4 hen Jerry Yeagley arrived to coach soccer at Indiana 24 years ago, he had to set up goals and paint lines on the field himself. His "team," a loose-knit bunch of foreign students and local hobby- ists, piled into station wagons, including Yeagley's, to travel to road games. "You could barely buy a soccer ball in Indiana," the coach recalls. But a lot of Hoosiers know now that a soccer ball isn't just something roundandsmallerthanabasketball. IUhas become a collegiate soccer powerhouse, earning a berth in the NCAA tournament in 11 of the last 13 years and winning the championship twice, including a legendary 1-0, eight-overtime victory over Duke. The Hoosiers are even building tradition. "I'm seeing buses and tailgate parties at the games now," Yeagley reports. "Those are really encouraging signs." Soccer, once mainly a gym-class exercise in U.S. colleges, is now a major intercolle- giate sport. About 160 men's teams played NCAA soccer in 1959, the year of the first championship tournament; this fall 546 teams will compete in three divisions. The number of women's teams has more than tripled, to 259, since their first NCAA championship in 1981. On a few campuses soccer is the sport. "Soccer here is like foot- ball at Oklahoma," says Harrison Cannon, a freshman at the University of North Car- olina in Greensboro, where the men's team has captured the Division III champion- Big time: UNC/Greensboro winning title 24 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS ship four of the last five years. And at Southern Methodist-which won't play in- tercollegiate football again until 1989 -the homecoming game this year was, yes, soccer-accompanied by floats, a corona- tion, a half-time show by the band and a lot of alumni trying to learn the game's rules. Why has the world's most popular sport finally hit it big on U.S. campuses? Partly because soccer is inexpensive: all you need is sneakers, a ball and some open space. Partly because many children of both sexes have been playing and learning the sport since elementary school. Since agility counts as much as strength, the short or slight can make the team. "You don't have to be 6-7 and weigh 240 to play," says Greensboro goalie Tony Hannum, a history I