The Panthers did have a game to play a week after the GoFundMe launched. But first, Boswell underwent tests that were supposed to show what type of surgery would be best. The results were a curve ball.
“It showed a mass the size of a tennis ball, and it had spread, which made it stage 3,” Boswell said. “It was in my lymph nodes, and at that point, it was no longer operable.”
Boswell was to start chemotherapy and radiation immediately. Her schedule put the grind of a season into perspective. She traveled for radiation Mondays through Fridays and spent Tuesdays getting radiation, immunotherapy and chemotherapy. She watched practices from her office at High Point. Then she began two and a half weeks of brachytherapy, a form of radiation therapy, at Duke.
Sometimes, there have been weeks where she’s attended games on Wednesdays. The lack of predictability is a challenge in an industry that thrives on in-season routines.
“Like any chemo and radiation treatments, you have your good days and you have your bad days, and they're unpredictable,” Boswell said. “I can't plan my week out like a normal coach would. As coaches, we always have to be two or three steps ahead — that's our job. I'm not able to do that. I've had to give myself a little bit of grace.”
Though her road was different, Kimel understands the sentiment — and encourages the grace.
“It puts games and winning all in perspective quickly,” Kimel said. “This is the most important game she has to win right now. It’s important that players see that as well. Your players just rally. Little petty things, like Susie and Mary arguing over whatever, become so unimportant.”
Kimel isn’t in the Panthers’ locker room, but she hit the nail on the head.
“It's brought our team closer than it's ever been,” Miles said. “It gives us a greater purpose — playing for something so much bigger than lacrosse. That’s helped us cope and continue to play with love and passion because she's done so much for us, and we want to play hard to make her job easier.”
Boswell’s husband, Jeff, has been her rock at home, and her coaching staff and captains have filled in the gaps for her all season long. Hannah Wszalek had head coaching experience, including at the Division I level with Drexel, and has primarily taken the reins when needed. Skylar McArthur, fresh off her final year at Canisius, works with the defense and goalies. In February, Lauren Di Puorto joined the staff to add experience, following a three-year stint as offensive coordinator and goalie coach at Catawba.
The captains — junior Mandy Brockamp, senior Kay Rosselli, and redshirt junior Sami MacDonald — have served as extensions of the staff.
“The staff I have right now is solid as a rock,” Boswell said. “They're very mature. They're experienced enough to run the team without me, and I have all the confidence in the world when I'm gone between our captains and leaders and our coaching staff.”