Athletics

Behrend soccer players look to their wrists for game-day motivation

Alex Bilka, a senior from Cranberry Township, writes a motivational word on her wrist before each game she plays with the Penn State Behrend women's soccer team. She has 19 goals and 9 assists this season. Credit: Penn State Behrend / Penn StateCreative Commons

ERIE, Pa. — Before the whistle, Alex Bilka looks down at her wrist, where she has inked the word “TEAM.”

Bilka, a senior from Cranberry Township, is a forward on the Penn State Behrend women’s soccer squad. She writes the word with a Sharpie before every game.

“It helps me get into the zone,” she said. “It pumps me up.”

Jordan Oberlander, a forward, writes “FAMILY.” Leah Morra writes “MOM.”

“It helps me to stay motivated,” said Morra, a midfielder. “If we go down in a game, if they score and we need to get one back, you look at your wrist and remember what’s important to you. It makes you fight a little harder.”

Head Coach Patrick O’Driscoll isn’t sure when the tradition began. Players already were writing on their wrists in 2011, when Shelby Lloyd joined the team.

“Our seniors might have started it,” Lloyd, now an assistant coach, said. “I loved the idea, and I love that they still do it. It really does build on the idea of being part of a team.”

She wrote “PSBWS” — shorthand for Penn State Behrend women’s soccer — on her wrist before every game she played.

Sometimes the abbreviations change. This year, when a teammate’s grandmother died, every player inked the woman’s initials onto their wrists. “We’re kind of a family,” Gionna Fonseca, a defender, said. “We wanted her to know we were there for her.”

That commitment is obvious on the field as well. The team carried an 11-game winning streak into the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference final on Nov. 5. They won that game, too, beating Pitt-Greensburg 6-1.

The Lions face Thomas More College in the first round of the NCAA Division III tournament on Nov. 11.

If there is a drawback to the wrist-writing, players say, it comes later, long after the game, as the letters are fading.

“If you use the same word, or the same initials, and it’s in Sharpie, it’s pretty much there all season,” Morra said. “Every time I see her, my grandma asks me, ‘Is that a tattoo?’”

Last Updated November 8, 2016

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