EVANSTON, Ill. — Sunday’s Northwestern-Boston College matchup in Evanston was one for storylines.
Perennial NCAA semifinal teams toed the line. Tewaaraton favorites like Jenn Medjid and Belle Smith and Izzy Scane took the field. Both teams are ranked among the top six nationally.
A wild Northwestern comeback in the game’s second half made it one for the books.
Fresh off a 10-goal performance against Notre Dame, Scane kickstarted a Northwestern comeback with a free position goal at the beginning of the third quarter. From there, the Wildcats fought for a 15-14 victory –– Northwestern’s first over the Eagles since 2013. Northwestern went on a 9-4 run over the second half.
“It shows what our kids have been fighting for,” Kelly Amonte Hiller said. “There’s been a lot of progression in our program. These guys came out here today, they went down and fought back and really made some big-time plays. I was really proud of them. They believed, and believing is the most important thing.”
Sunday marked just the fourth meeting all-time between the powerhouse programs. The last meeting, a dominant 18-9 BC win in February 2022, felt worlds away. On Sunday, neither team led by more than four goals, and no individual tallied more than five goals. Last season’s matchup was also held in the Fish Fieldhouse in Chestnut Hill, closed to the public, while Sunday featured a lively, nearly sold-out crowd in Ryan Fieldhouse.
The top scorers in last season’s game —Jill Girardi and Charlotte North — have graduated from their respective programs. With their absence, both programs are flaunting new-look attacks. Scane has returned for Northwestern after a historic 98-goal season in 2021, and Smith and Medjid are taking the helm for the Eagles.
Boston College ruled the matchup in the first half, starting with a goal from Smith just over four minutes into the first quarter. The Eagles initially moved the ball with ease, stifling the Northwestern defense with a polished, pass-heavy strategy. Six different scorers, led by a hat trick from Smith, powered BC to a 10-6 halftime lead.
Acacia Walker-Weinstein credited her team’s initial offensive success to plenty of ball movement and players being in the right place at the right time.
The Wildcats had a quiet first quarter, trailing 5-2 at its end. But Northwestern began to pick up pace in the second quarter, tallying four goals and narrowing Boston College’s lead to two goals at multiple points.
Scane said the Wildcats were caught off guard by Boston College’s defensive scheme.
“It took a bit of time to make the right motions,” Scane said. “[We were] making sure we were setting up on offense — not taking the first look, but looking for the open second, third look.”