Sam Apuzzo can’t hide from her biggest fear, no matter how much she’d prefer to avoid it.
It happens coming out of an elevator. It happens walking around a corner in the locker room. It even got the best of her during the Athletes Unlimited Lacrosse season’s closing ceremony.
Apuzzo, the former Boston College star and current U.S. women’s training team member, can’t help but jump, fall or shriek at sudden loud noises. There are few that do enjoy these sounds, but Apuzzo’s reactions are, well, abnormally animated — the horror in her eyes, the defensive leap, the ear-piercing scream.
Just ask her teammates and friends. They orchestrated and filmed a handful of devious plans to scare the 2018 Tewaaraton Award winner.
“It’s hilarious when we sneak behind her and scare her,” 2021 Tewaaraton Award winner Charlotte North said. “She’s the jumpiest person I’ve ever met.”
“There were quite a few times that I would hide behind something and wait to scare her, which is so mean,” said Dempsey Arsenault, her Boston College and U.S. teammate. “I know I feel bad a little bit going back, but if I had an opportunity to do it again, I probably would.”
Even when her teammates aren’t plotting against her, Apuzzo is prone to her jumpiness.
“It’s the simplest stuff,” she joked. “Even at practice, I know we have the clock up and I know the time is running out, because I physically can see it. I still jump when the horn goes off.”
Apuzzo grew up easily scared and quite bashful — all it took was a horror movie or (randomly) the sight of Johnny Depp to startle her. Aside from the situational fears, she spent much of her childhood growing into her personality and shaking off a considerable amount of shyness and self-doubt.
When Sam Apuzzo steps onto a lacrosse field, grabs a stick and begins eyeing up her opponents, there is no fear in sight. The West Babylon, N.Y., native, who will suit up with the U.S. women’s national team at Fall Classic this weekend, glides up and down the field with confidence, aggression and a narrow focus on the cage.
Lacrosse quickly became a source of confidence for Apuzzo, who poured in 283 goals in her four seasons at Boston College. As she excelled in lacrosse, a new Apuzzo started to emerge.
“She doesn’t always have that bubbly, outgoing personality,” said Apuzzo’s mother, Rosemary. “I always was worried that she wasn’t like that because sometimes you get overlooked when you don’t put yourself out there. She shows it on the field with lacrosse.”