By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — For University of Virginia junior Victoria Safradin, summer break was no vacation. After the spring semester ended at UVA, she trained with two National Women’s Soccer League teams as well as the United States’ U20 national team before returning to Grounds late last month.
All that soccer meant Safradin wasn’t able to spend much time at home with her family in Eastlake, Ohio, near Cleveland. Still, for someone who’s been consumed by sport since she was young, it was a summer to remember.
Safradin has dreamed for years of playing professional soccer after college, and her stints in training with the North Carolina Courage and the Seattle Reign gave those NWSL teams an opportunity to evaluate her.
“If you perform well, they’re going to remember you,” Safradin said.
UVA is well-represented in the NWSL, and Safradin was able to reconnect this summer with three alumni of the program: Talia Staude, who plays for NC Courage; and Phoebe McClernon and Veronica Latsko, who play for the Reign.
“It’s nice being with old UVA players,” Safradin said. “It gives you more of a homey feeling.”
We've got soccer at Klöckner on Saturday night!
Hoos vs. DC Power FC at 8 p.m. with free admission as the back half of a doubleheader with the men's team.#GoHoos | #ALLIN https://t.co/sm5sK2Tylg
— Virginia Women's Soccer (@UVAWomenSoccer) August 8, 2025
Her third college season officially starts next week, when No. 15 UVA visits West Virginia. But the Wahoos played an exhibition against ACC foe Wake Forest in Winston-Salem, N.C., on Wednesday night, and they’ll be at Klöckner Stadium on Saturday.
In an exhibition doubleheader that’s free to the public, the 17th-ranked Cavalier men face VMI at 5 p.m. and the Virginia women take on DC Power, a pro team, at 8 p.m.
Safradin, who stands 5-foot-10, is in her second year as the Hoos’ starting goalkeeper. As a freshman in 2023, she backed up Cayla White, who was a graduate student. Safradin took over in goal last season and helped Virginia reach its customary postseason destination.
After missing the NCAA tournament in 2023—the only time that has happened in Steve Swanson’s long tenure as head coach—the Cavaliers came into last year determined to earn a spot in the field of 64, and “throughout the entire season that was our goal,” Safradin said. “We kept fighting to get to that spot. So it was just a really good feeling to have been a part of that process and journey.”
Safradin did her part, making 42 saves in her 18 appearances, and the coaching staff believes her potential is unlimited.
“She’s got all the tools and she applies herself,” Swanson said. “The best thing about Viki Safradin, though, is who she is as a person. She’s an amazing leader. She’s just got a great work ethic.”
In the recruiting class that graduated from high school in 2023, Sadrafin was ranked No. 1 among those at her position.
“I’ve never seen a goalkeeper make the kinds of saves she made at the youth level,” said Swanson, who’s in his 26th year at UVA. “She gets to things that not a lot of goalkeepers could even fathom getting to. She has a great combination of size, height, explosiveness, desire, agility, and she’s got great hands.”
Assistant coach Sam Raper works with the Hoos’ goalkeepers. Raper, who’s from England, joined Swanson’s staff in the spring of 2022. Safradin was still in high school then, but Raper had coached her on U.S. youth national teams, so he was familiar with her skill set when she arrived on Grounds in the summer of 2023.
“Viki’s special quality is her explosiveness,” Raper said. “She is such an athletic goalkeeper.”
