BERKELEY, Calif. -- Teammates are expressing their sorrow over the death of a UC Berkeley soccer player who went missing from a Southern California fraternity party over the weekend. On Monday, the Cal Athletics Department tweeted a message that said: "Today we lost a beloved member of the #CalFamily, Eloi Vasquez. We send thoughts & prayers to his family & friends."
The entire soccer community came together over the past couple of days during the search for the 19-year-old. And now, they are coming together in their grief with MLS teams, NCAA, and even the Pac-12 tweeting out their condolences.
"Eloi was a wonderful teammate," said UC Berkeley Soccer Coach Kevin Grimes. "He was very close to all of his players and our guys are grieving pretty hard right now."
Los Angeles police found the body of 19-year-old Eloi Vasquez around 2:25 a.m. Saturday. He was hit by a car on the Santa Monica freeway just a couple miles north of USC's campus.
His injuries were so gruesome that family members say officers thought he was an older man, until identifying him as the missing Cal soccer player on Monday.
"Eloi Vasquez was a wonderful young man," said UC Berkeley Assistant Athletic Director Wesley Mallette. "A fantastic student athlete, dedicated and devoted to everything he did."
Vasquez was visiting Los Angeles for spring break with his teammates. His grandma, Bonnie Mongolin, says he didn't really want to leave his younger brothers.
"He just left really half-heartedly," she said. "I dropped him off at the BART station and he just said, 'I love you, nana,' and I said, 'I love you, Eloi,' and that was it."
Early Saturday morning Vasquez told friends he wanted to leave a party at Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity and go to the beach. They tried to stop him, but he left.
He made two phone calls to Aurora Cardenas, a friend in Berkeley. She says he sounded confused and asked for help.
"He was just really worried and didn't know what to do," she said.
Eventually he hung up and he was hit by the car just seven minutes later.
On Monday, the freshman soccer player was remembered by his coach and teammates.
"Although he only spent a little over a semester here with us at Cal, his impact was huge, certainly on me," Grimes said.
Teammate Alex Mangels added, "He meant a lot to us, we all saw how much he loved his family and how much he put into the game."
Funeral arrangements are underway.