Welcome to “5-and-5,” a new series from US Lacrosse Magazine that features prominent athletes, coaches and personalities combining on-field perspective with off-field persona. WPLL Fight and U.S. training team attacker Kylie Ohlmiller is one of the best offensive players in the game. But who stifled her with a faceguard? These are her words.
Jasi Docal
Northwestern, 2016
We are friends now due to my connection with Brave Enterprises, the incredible company she works for and inspires so many people through, so any time we talk about this game, we have a good laugh. This was my sophomore year at Stony Brook, and we ended up losing the game 7-6 to Northwestern on their infamous field directly on the side of Lake Michigan. A chill in the air, and a top-10 battle that was a fight every year when we played them. Both teams knew it would be nothing less than the same going into that game.
I expected a hard mark from them, since they had shown a hard mark on me the year prior. This game, they put Jasi on me like glue (which I later came to find out was her first career start) for the entirety of the game. Legitimately she did not take her eyes off me for one second — not even when the ball was being held on the Northwestern offensive end for 15-plus minutes (pre-shot clock era). There were some of her closest friends in the bleachers right next to the sideline chirping me and hyping her up for doing such a great job at getting in my head. Let’s just say she did her job so well that I played all 60 minutes and did not have the ball in my stick ONE time, not even off a ground ball or a missed shot. Nothing. By far the best job at a faceguard I’ve ever seen. Luckily I can call her a friend now and we can laugh about it because at the time, it was far more frustrating than any game I’d played in in my career.