Tag Archives: Harrison Bertos

One for All the Ages

When Washington’s winner bulged the back of the net, it was as if it was wired with an electrical charge capable of instantly zapping purple-clad alumni across the continent and back through the ages.

Not only was it pandemonium on the Washington bench but also in the rec rooms of UW players and coaches and fans spanning seven decades. Stabbing his close range shot between post and N.C. State keeper, Harry Bertos finally, after 63 seasons, pushed the Huskies over the hump and into the elite circle of NCAA champions on Dec. 15.

Ron Jepson, Washington’s first head coach, watches the Huskies’ NCAA championship celebration from Bellingham. (Courtesy Ron Jepson)

Scattered across the Northwest and nation were some 600 former players and coaches, now fans, who were watching the national final on their phones and rec room screens. Up in Bellingham, the UW men’s soccer program’s first coach spontaneously defied gravity.

“We jumped up off our seats,” exclaimed Ron Jepson of his family’s reaction. It was a “momentous occasion,” added Jepson, the coach of UW’s first varsity team. An engineering graduate student from England, he was handed Washington’s reins in October 1962, when the nearest collegiate competition was in Victoria and Vancouver.

Euphoria in Carolina

While Jepson was 2,947 miles away from the drama in Cary, N.C., Marty Rood was in the house at WakeMed Soccer Park. Rood, who played under Mike Ryan in the early Seventies, had flown from Seattle on the morning of the match, arriving in Raleigh a couple hours before kickoff, to join the scores of UW traveling fans dwarfed by the 10,000 cheering the hometown Wolfpack.

Rood stood alongside other alums spanning the seven decades of Husky soccer and found himself hoarse from support and celebrations going long into the night.

“This win was more euphoric than any in my years of soccer,” shared Rood. “It just didn’t seem they would lose…they just never gave up. They were relentless!”

Marty Rood, right, and friend Peter Knowles pose with the trophy following the game. (Courtesy Martin Rood)

Much like the state’s past 13 collegiate champions at the Division II and NAIA levels, most of this Washington roster was homegrown. Seven of the starters and 10 of the 15 (19 in total) to see action at the College Cup finals hail from the state. That’s always been a hallmark of the Huskies (by comparison, N.C. State had 11 internationals and six in-state players).

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