Year Overall Conference Place Postseason 2004 9-5-5 4-3-2 T-4th America East Quarterfinals 2005 11-5-3 4-3-1 4th America East Quarterfinals 2006 9-7-4 5-1-2 2nd America East Finals 2007 9-10-3 4-2-2 2nd NCAA Second Round 2008 9-4-7 4-1-3 3rd America East Semifinals 2009 1-10-5 1-5-2 7th N/A 2010 7-8-4 2-4-1 6th America East Quarterfinals 2011 9-7-1 4-2-1 T-2nd America East Quarterfinals 2012 8-5-5 5-0-2 1st America East Regular Season Champions 2013 9-5-4 3-3-1 4th America East Quarterfinals 2014 8-9-2 2-4-1 5th America East Semifinals 2015 11-7-3 3-2-2 2nd NCAA First Round 2016 14-7-1 4-3-0 3rd NCAA Second Round Total 114-89-47 45-33-20

Formerly the head coach at the University of Vermont,has been named to the same position with the FGCU men's soccer team, Director of Athleticsannounced on Monday morning.The head coach at Vermont for the past 13 seasons, Cormier won 14 games with the Catamounts last year and advanced to the NCAA Tournament Second Round. Cormier, 43, will be taking over for program-founding head coach Bob Butehorn, who left for the same position at USF last month after equally leading FGCU to 14 wins and an NCAA Tournament Second Round.During his time with Vermont, Cormier guided the program to the America East Tournament in 12 of 13 seasons, making five title game appearances, winning two tournament crowns, claiming a regular-season championship and advancing to three NCAA tournaments, including a pair of second round appearances. In 2016, the America East ranked as the 3rd-best conference in the nation, behind only the ACC and Pac-12, and ahead of the Big Ten, Big East and Conference USA.A 1995 Vermont alumnus, Cormier returned to Burlington after serving as an assistant coach and associate head coach at Oregon State from 2001-03. During his time in Corvallis, he helped lead the Beavers to the most successful three-year run in school history and was promoted to associate head coach prior to the 2003 campaign. Prior to his tenure at Oregon State, Cormier was the top assistant coach at West Virginia (2000) and was an assistant coach at Bradley (1997-99)."I want to express my gratitude and appreciation to Athletic Directorand the search committee for giving me this great opportunity to take over and lead a program which has achieved great success," said Cormier. "Bob (Butehorn) built a great program that is extremely dynamic with so many great young men. I'm looking forward to the opportunity to work with them."I'm excited about the possibilities of generating high standards of excellence in the classroom, on the field and in the community, and having an impact on who these young men become as they go out into the world," Cormier added.The 14 wins for Vermont this past season were the 2nd-most in program history. UVM – which achieved its highest RPI (20th) and national ranking (#14) – earned an at-large selection and hosted a First Round NCAA Tournament contest for only the second time in program history. A total of five Catamounts earned NSCAA All-American, NSCAA All-East Region, ECAC All-Star, America East All-Conference, All-Rookie and All-Academic honors at the end of the season.Cormier's Vermont team scored a program-record 42 goals in 2016 – tied for the 5th-most in the nation. He'll be inheriting an FGCU program which led the country in nearly every offensive category a season ago, including goals with 62 – nine more than any other team. The Eagles return nearly every player from that team, including national goals (22) and points (49) leader, a First Team All-American and one of three finalists for the MAC Hermann Trophy – college soccer's equivalent of the Heisman."It is with great pleasure that we welcome Jesse, his wife Amy and the rest of the Cormier family into FGCU, Southwest Florida and our Eagles' athletics family," stated Kavanagh. "A quality individual, Jesse is a proven winner and brings a tremendous wealth of experience and coaching success to The Nest. In turn, we look forward to him providing energized daily leadership to our wonderful group of student-athletes, quickly getting engaged with our growing fan base and maintaining the tremendous tradition of overall excellence, on and off the pitch, that has been established by FGCU men's soccer since our inception a decade ago."In addition to all of his teams' successes on the pitch, Cormier emphasizes off-field citizenship and academics of his student-athletes. In 2007, Vermont defender Connor Tobin was named the 2007 America East Men's Soccer Scholar-Athlete of the Year. In 2006, Corey Bronner was selected as an ESPN The Magazine Men's Soccer Academic All-American. During Cormier's time at Vermont, every single player who competed for all four years graduated.At Oregon State, Cormier helped transform the program into a national power with outstanding coaching and recruiting. In 2002, OSU made its first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance. As Oregon State's recruiting coordinator, Cormier's final two classes were recognized among the nation's best by CollegeSoccerNews.com. The national website also cited Cormier as one of the outstanding assistant coaches in the country.Cormier becomes just the 2nd head coach in FGCU men's soccer history. Since the program's first season in 2007, it has produced six professional players and 63 ASUN All-Conference selections. In just six years of Division-I postseason eligibility, FGCU has won four ASUN Tournament championships and made four NCAA Tournament appearances – in 2011, 2012, 2014 and 2016 – and won an unprecedented six-straight ASUN regular-season championships from 2010-15.The program reached record heights this past season as the Eagles secured a program-record 14 wins as part of a 14-4-3 overall record, a program-best 10-game winning streak in the middle of the season and a national ranking for the final nine weeks of the year, including a program-high #11 showing in the NSCAA Poll on Oct. 18 and a #20 final ranking – the highest in D-I history of any program at FGCU.FGCU advanced to the NCAA Tournament again, and broke through to the Second Round for the first time after defeating USF in penalty kicks. The Eagles eventually fell just short in double overtime against a North Carolina team which played in the College Cup.Since the program's first two seasons, FGCU has posted a winning record each of the past eight years, including double-figure victory totals in half of those campaigns. All-time, the Eagles are 95-63-24 (.588) in 10 seasons, including a dominant 52-18-7 (.721) record in ASUN contests.Cormier played at Vermont from 1991-94. He ranks 6th in career points (59) and is tied for 6th all-time in goals (24). He earned a spot on the America East All-Championship Team as a sophomore in 1992, leading Vermont to the conference title game. He led the team in scoring as a senior with 21 points off nine goals and three assists, and following the season he earned All-New England honors and was selected as the team's Most Valuable Player. Cormier received his Bachelor's degree in history from UVM.A native of Hoosick Falls, N.Y., near the Vermont border, Cormier earned his Master's degree in leadership and human services at Bradley – where Kavanagh was then the Athletic Director – in 1999. Cormier an assistant coach on the 1998 Missouri Valley Conference Championship squad that was inducted into the Bradley Athletics Hall of Fame in 2014.Following graduation, Cormier went on to play professionally in the United States (Cincinnati River Hawks, Connecticut Wolves) and overseas (Oxford United FC, Oxford City FC) before beginning his coaching career. Cormier and his wife, Amy, have three children, a son Kai (17), and daughters Parrish (13) and Jazaher (11)."FGCU today got an incredible soccer coach. Jesse is one of the best mentors in the college game. He has a deep respect for student-athletes, and he has a tremendous respect for their growth not only as players but as young men. Everyone at FGCU will be impressed with the passion he has for student-athletes. As a coach, Jesse is a terrific tactician and organizer of his players. He will motivate each player in a manner which works for them. He's great at communicating his vision. He will only continue to build upon what Bob (Butehorn) started. FGCU got one of the brightest young coaches in the game.""This is a big win and quite a coup for FGCU. As a person, Jesse is as good as you're going to find in this business. He's going to bring in the type of student-athletes that will make the university proud. He's able to develop players, get them motivated and get them to buy in to what he's trying to accomplish – as he's proven at Vermont. Bob did a great job building the FGCU program, and I'm 100 percent confident that Jesse will continue to build on that foundation."For up-to-the minute information and a behind-the-scenes look at the FGCU men's soccer program, follow on Twitter @FGCU_MSoccer, Instagram @FGCU_MSoccer, Facebook /FGCUMSoccer and YouTube /FGCUAthletics.FGCU Athletics sponsors events throughout the year to benefit the FGCU Campus Food Pantry (www.fgcu.edu/foodpantry) and the Harry Chapin Food Bank (www.harrychapinfoodbank.org), FGCU Athletics' charities of choice. For more information, including how to make a contribution, please visit www.fgcu.edu/foodpantry and utilize the hashtag #FeedFGCU to help raise awareness.