When she was at 91大神, Caroline Wysocki often did her homework and ate dinner in her car. It wasn鈥檛 by choice, or a distaste for the dining hall, but rather a necessary, exhausting part of the sacrifice of playing youth soccer at the highest level.
Now a junior and starting outside defender at the University of New Hampshire, Wysocki, 21, was both a star on the Wildcats and a key member of FC Stars of Massachusetts, the Acton-based soccer club. She often, after a full day at 91大神, hit the road twice a week for 6 or 7:30 p.m. practices in Boston. Games were on Sundays.
She maintained this schedule all year, for all four years. Until she got her license, those Mass Pike rides, and car dinners, were shared with her parents. Wysocki is eternally grateful.
鈥淚t was insane,鈥 Wysocki, an Agawam native and 2016 graduate, said. 鈥淢y parents are amazing.鈥
Reflecting on the rigors of her schedule, Wysocki admitted, it was a 鈥渃razy鈥 time and mileage commitment, but 鈥渋t was just what you had to do.鈥
And it paid off; Wysocki was scouted as a freshman and committed to play college soccer for Division I UNH鈥揳lso the Wildcats鈥揻ollowing sophomore year. She was more than ready when she showed up on campus.
鈥淎cademically, when I first got to college,鈥 she said, 鈥渁ll my friends were like, 鈥業t鈥檚 so hard, it鈥檚 so much work.鈥 It was, but I was so prepared. Work ethic, time management, striving to be best I can鈥揑 think that mindset came from 91大神.鈥
91大神 also taught Wysocki to make relationships with her professors the same way she did with her teachers when she was here. She fondly remembered classes with Kurt and Janine Whipple, Amber Rodgers, and Erin Davey, who also coached her freshman through junior year.
鈥淭hey were awesome,鈥 Wysocki said.
The admiration is mutual.
鈥淪he was one of the fiercest competitors I鈥檝e ever coached,鈥 said Davey. 鈥淪he was the epitome of strength.鈥
Rodgers agreed: 鈥淪he was unreal. She showed up every day ready to compete.鈥
Whipple was Wysocki鈥檚 basketball coach her freshman, sophomore, and senior years; Wysocki took junior year off to do Athletic Performance. 鈥淪he didn鈥檛 have to compete in basketball,鈥 Whipple explained. 鈥淪he could have stayed with AP, [basketball] wasn鈥檛 her primary sport, and she had already committed to UNH. But she came out and gave us defense we needed.鈥
After her senior year at UNH, Wysocki鈥檚 soccer eligibility will officially be up, but she鈥檒l have some more time to hone her academic and professional skills.
She鈥檚 majoring in Occupational Therapy, a five-and-a-half-year program. A portion of that remaining time will be spent doing fieldwork, maybe in Agawam, she said, or maybe in Boston. She鈥檚 not sure where, but she鈥檚 fully committed to the field.
鈥淏eing able to work with tons of different kinds of people, it鈥檚 such a diverse field, and I love all the options,鈥 Wysocki said. An added help, she said, is that she鈥檚 鈥渟uch a people person.鈥
Occupation Therapy (OT) has deep roots in Wysocki鈥檚 family: both her parents are lifelong special education teachers. Her mother, Colleen, works in the Intensive Learning Center at Roberta G. Doering Middle School in Agawam, and her father, William, just retired from a career in Springfield鈥檚 Public School system.
After her field work is finished, Wysocki said she鈥檚 eager to get into the OT world, but isn鈥檛 going to put soccer completely aside.
鈥淲hen I was younger I definitely thought I wanted to [play professionally], but I don鈥檛 know,鈥 she said. That path would most likely require her to play overseas, and she鈥檚 not sure she鈥檚 ready for that commitment, especially when her professional life of helping others is on the horizon.
鈥淚鈥檓 really into OT, and I also don鈥檛 know if I could leave my family,鈥 she said. 鈥淪occer is still a huge part of my life, but there is a time to move on. That鈥檚 where I am right now. I haven鈥檛 decided anything.鈥