3. There’s a lot of offensive firepower on these teams.
Combined, the four semifinalists feature seven of the top 14 individual scorers in the nation this year, including five players with at least 100 points scored. Queens’ Rebecca Kinsley, a graduate transfer from Stony Brook, leads the nation with 131 points (70 goals, 61 assists). Her senior teammate, Kyleigh Masteran, is third nationally in total points with 113 and leads the country with 90 goals scored. Senior Kaitlyn Hardin has 97 points on the year.
UIndy’s All-American Abigail Lagos also has 113 points on the year and is third nationally with 88 goals scored. With 209 career goals, Lagos also became UIndy’s all-time goal scoring leader in 2022. ESU has three scorers among the national leaders in Gianna LeDuc (103 points), Emily Mitarotonda (101 points) and Kiki Fitzpatrick (99 points).
4. The defenses aren’t too shabby either.
Not to be overlooked, all four teams rank among the national leaders in scoring defense this year. Ultimately, defense wins championships, right? UIndy has the stingiest defense in the land, allowing just 5.33 goals per game. Queens ranks second (5.76), Adelphi is third (6.15) and ESU is sixth (6.40) in scoring defense. All four teams also rank among the top 20 in the country in caused turnovers.
Individually, Adelphi senior goalie Emma Lemanski leads the nation with a 6.11 goals against average, and ESU’s McKenzie Gaghan ranks third (7.09 GAA). Two great strategic battles await between potent offenses and stellar defenses in both semifinal games.
5. History could be made.
As the only undefeated team remaining, Queens can achieve something that hasn’t happened in eight years — an undefeated national championship. The last undefeated D-II champion was Adelphi, which completed a 22-0 campaign in 2014 with a 7-5 victory over Lock Haven. This is also Queens’ last chance to claim a title at this level, as the Royals are reclassifying to Division I, effective July 1.
As noted earlier, Adelphi will be trying to capture its 10th national championship, joining a small and elite group of men’s and women’s lacrosse programs, at all levels, that have reached double-digits in the number of trophies collected. A championship by East Stroudsburg or UIndy would be a historic first for either school.