Tusculum College Women's Soccer Coaching Staff

Head Coach Mike Joy | Assistant Coach Erica LaShomb

Mike JoyMIKE JOY
Head Women's Soccer Coach
Email Coach Mike Joy

Head coach Mike Joy has been at the helm of the Tusculum College women’s soccer program for the past 10 seasons. Those 10 years has been an era of success, resulting in championships and national postseason play.

Joy rejuvenated the program upon his arrival in Greeneville in 1997, and TC women’s soccer has established itself as one of the most formidable programs in the South Atlantic Conference since the school joined the league in 1999. Since 2000, the Pioneers have claimed either the SAC regular season championship, the SAC Tournament title or advanced to the NCAA II Tournament each year. During his storied tenure, Joy's teams have claimed four SAC Championships and four SAC Tournament titles in the last seven years.

Coach Joy’s squads have grown accustomed to facing tough competition, as TC traditionally plays a challenging schedule consisting of a number of Top 25 opponents. His desire to face some of Division II’s best teams makes Joy’s 141-54-14 coaching record at Tusculum all the more impressive. He is one of the winningest active coaches in NCAA Division II women’s soccer, ranking fourth with 227 total victories and 10th with a .728 career win percentage. With a 40-11-6 record (.754) against SAC opponents, Joy ranks second all-time among SAC women’s soccer coaches in league victories (40). He also places second with 118 overall wins (since 1998).

In 2006, the Pioneers didn't claim the SAC Championship or SAC Tournament title for the first time in seven years. But Tusculum made its strongest national postseason run in school history, posting regional wins over Armstrong Atlantic State University and Carson-Newman College to claim the 2006 NCAA II Southeast Region Championship and advance to the NCAA Elite Eight for the first time in school history. Tusculum's No. 8 NSCAA/NCAA II national ranking was the best listing at the end of a season in school history. Tusculum ended the year 14-3-3, the program's ninth consecutive winning season. Three players garnered All-Region accolades, while defender Ashley Moreira was named to the NSCAA/NCAA II All-America Team.

Joy's 2005 Pioneer squad concluded the season with a 12-6-2 record and a No. 18 national ranking in the final NSCAA/NCAA II poll. TC earned its second NCAA Tournament berth and was the top seed and host for the Southeast Regional. The squad also captured its fourth Food Lion SAC Tournament championship. Five Pioneer players were named to the All-South Atlantic Conference Team, while two players earned All-Region recognition. As a result of the team's success, Joy was the recipient of the 2006 Art Argauer Award, presented annually to the school's Coach of the Year.

In 2004, Tusculum concluded the season with a 14-4-1 overall record and a 6-1 SAC mark, which tied the Pioneers with eventual NCAA Final Four participant Carson-Newman atop the final league standings. When the campaign came to a close, TC had faced five Top 25 opponents in a total of six matches, posting a 3-1-1 record in those contests.

Coach Joy
Year-By-Year
Year
W
L
T

Pct.

Midway College
1992
18
3
0
.857
1993
18
3
1
.841
1994
20
6
0
.769
1995
17
7
2
.692
1996
13
6
2
.667
Tusculum College
1997
10
11
1
.477
1998
13
7
2
.636
1999
15
6
0
.714
2000
19
3
0
.864
2001
16
2
3
.833
2002
13
7
1
.643
2003
15
5
1
.763
2004
14
4
1
.763
2005
12
6
2
.650
2006
14
3
3
.775
Totals
227
79
19
.728

In Joy’s debut season in 1997, the Pioneers showed marked improvement with a 10-11-1 record. They followed with a 13-7-2 mark in 1998. After a sluggish 2-4 start, Tusculum won 13 of its last 15 matches en route to a 15-6 showing in 1999. Included in that tally was a 6-2 record and a third place finish in TC’s first season of South Atlantic Conference play.

The 2000 campaign was a new season and a new century for the Pioneers and what a year it was. The Pioneers recorded an impressive 19-3 record, including a perfect 7-0 mark in league play while capturing the regular season and tournament titles. TC outscored the tournament opposition by a 21-0 margin and became only the second SAC squad to win both titles outright in a season and the first to do so since 1991. The 2000 team smashed the record books by establishing or matching 23 team and individual school records, 11 SAC records and one NCAA Division II record.

Joy’s 2001 team took over where the 2000 team left off. The Pioneers captured both the regular season and conference tournament championships for a second consecutive season, finishing with a 16-2-3 overall record and 5-1-1 mark in conference play. Tusculum became the first school in SAC history to win back-to-back outright regular season and tournament titles.

Faced with the toughest schedule in school history, his 2002 team went 13-7-1, winning a share of its third straight SAC title. The schedule included all three teams that held the No. 1 national ranking that year.

After several years of just missing the cut, Joy’s 2003 team reached the NCAA Division II Tournament, advancing to the Southeast Region final before bowing out to eventual national champion Kennesaw State. Prior to the season-ending loss, the squad had played some of its finest soccer of the season, putting together four straight shutout wins, including three in the SAC Tournament, to claim its third tournament title in four years.

A native of Dallas, Texas, Joy came to Tusculum after a successful five-year run at Midway College. While at the Midway, Ky. school, Joy posted an impressive 86-25-5 record, while capturing five consecutive Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (KIAC) titles. He also guided the Eagles to a record five NAIA regional championship appearances. Joy’s teams claimed two Mid-South Region titles and earned back-to-back berths in the NAIA National Championships in 1994 and 1995. His squads were also ranked in the NAIA Top 20 during all five seasons, and remarkably, his teams never lost a conference match during his watch.

For his efforts, the 1978 University of Kentucky graduate has earned NAIA District 32, NSCAA/Umbro Midsouth and Great Lakes Region Coach of the Year accolades. More impressively, he has been nominated three times for National Coach of the Year consideration.

In 1990, Joy returned to his alma mater to start the women’s soccer program at Kentucky. While competing as a club team, the Lady Kats posted a 20-12-2 record during his two seasons in Lexington.

Joy served double-duty on the Pioneer athletics staff for three years, also acting as head coach of the Tusculum men and women’s tennis programs. In his successful three-year run at the net, he accounted for a combined 79-64 record for both programs. The 2000-01 season was his finest, as the men’s squad posted a 13-8 tally and finished third in the South Atlantic Conference. The women’s team also shined that year, as the Pioneers went 13-10 and became the first Tusculum team to earn a berth in the NCAA Division II Tournament.

For his efforts in the 2000-01 season, Joy was honored by his peers as the recipient of the Art Argauer Award.

He is also the director and founder of the “Joy of Soccer” camp, which has just completed its 16th year.

Joy and his wife Kathy, who is the director of Tusculum’s Professional Studies Program in Gray, are the parents of three children, Heather, Lesli, and Justin. Heather graduated from Tusculum in 1999 after two seasons as goalkeeper. Lesli is a graduate of Midway College, and Justin currently lives in Lexington, Ky. Coach Joy also has one grandson, Tyler and a granddaughter, Madison.

 

Erica LaShombERICA LaSHOMB
Assistant Women's Soccer Coach

Former Tennessee Lady Volunteer Erica LaShomb is entering her second season as assistant women's soccer coach at Tusculum College.

It has been a homecoming for LaShomb, who played her final three prep seasons locally at Greeneville High School. From 1996-98, LaShomb totaled 120 goals and 54 assists with the Lady Devils. Her 54 helpers established a new school record for three seasons, while her 120 scoring tallies are the second most in the Region I record books. While at GHS, she earned All-Conference, All-District, All-Tournament and All-Region honors every year.

Originally signed by Clemson University when she graduated from Greeneville, LaShomb was injured and missed the entire season in her only year with the Tigers. She transferred to Tennessee in 2000, where she made an immediate impact as she totaled 10 points on four goals and a pair of assists as the Lady Vols posted a 12-8 campaign, including a 7-2 mark to finish second in the Southeastern Conference.

In 2001, Tennessee followed with an 11-6-1 showing, while tying for second in the SEC Eastern Division going 7-2. UT punched its ticket for the program's first-ever appearance in the NCAA Tournament In her junior campaign, Tennessee posted an impressive 18-6-1 mark while capturing the SEC Tournament title. UT advanced to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA College Cup where it was ousted by No. 2 North Carolina, 3-1.
During her senior campaign, Tennessee won both the SEC regular season and tournament crowns and advanced to the NCAA Sweet 16 for a second straight year, before falling to No. 8 Florida on penalty kicks. The 2003 squad went 17-5-2 and 7-1-1 in the league.

During her career at Tennessee, the Lady Vols posted a 58-25-4 record, including a 27-7-2 SEC worksheet.

She graduated from Tennessee in 2004 with a degree in Education Health and Human Sciences. From 2000-04, she also served as a counselor and coach with the Tennessee Women's Soccer Camps.