Jane Earley, A (Middlebury to Denver)
The most intriguing add from the portal was made by Denver, a team seeking some offensive punch to help out its history-making defense. Olivia Penoyer and Payton Vaughn both come over from Yale, but they’re proven commodities in Division I. Earley simply dominated Division III, winning three national championships and two national player of the year awards at Middlebury. The polished scorer is also an established draw threat, notching 138 in 2023, which was second-most in program history. Abby Jenkins, Trinity McPherson and Sam Thacker return as playmakers on the draw for the Pios, but adding Earley certainly won’t hurt. She has the potential to impact Denver in more ways than one.
Sarah Falk, M (Albany to Florida)
Few teams (and individual players) raised their stock more than Albany and Sarah Falk last May. By beating Virginia in the NCAA tournament, Albany was one of the best stories of the postseason. Falk was at the center of the Great Danes’ playoff run, notching 22 of her single-season program record 72 goals during the final four games of the season. Her seven goals against Virginia all came in the second half and were crucial to the Danes’ win. Falk parlayed that performance into a chance at Florida, which suddenly has a massive opening on offense after the departure of Emma LoPinto. Falk is a well-rounded threat who should translate well to the AAC as a graduate student.
Ashley Humphrey, A (Stanford to TBD)
There’s still no official word on where Ashley Humphrey will land. She’s isn’t listed any 2023-24 rosters, and while sources say North Carolina could be a landing spot to play with her younger sister (and top Inside Lacrosse freshman) Chloe, UNC has not confirmed the addition. Either way, the team that brings in Humphrey is going to reap the benefits of a record-holding distributor. As a redshirt-freshman in 2022, she set the NCAA’s single-season assists record with 88. She followed that with a more balanced season in 2023 (33 goals, 42 assists). Humphrey is a capable quarterback who can play behind the cage and initiate.
Madison McPherson, M (Johns Hopkins to Stanford)
Stanford is adding an all-around threat in McPherson, the younger sister of Denver’s Trinity McPherson. The new Stanford star did a little bit of everything in four years at Johns Hopkins, accumulating 37 goals, eight assists, 85 draw controls, 49 caused turnovers and 90 ground balls. Stanford remains deep in the midfield, and offense isn’t a problem for the Cardinal, but Danielle Spencer could use a boost on the defensive side, and that’s potentially where McPherson can make the biggest impact.
Arden Tierney, A (Richmond to Notre Dame)
Notre Dame is loading up after being the only unseeded team in the NCAA quarterfinals. The Irish welcome Tierney to the fold this fall after a career at Richmond in which she produced gaudy offensive numbers — 239 points on 135 goals and 104 assists and 405 draw controls. It’s not as if Notre Dame was lacking on the offensive side (Jackie Wolak, Madison Ahern and Kasey Choma are all back) or on the draw (Kelly Denes and Mary Kelly Doherty return, too), but it never hurts to have options. If Tierney isn’t bothered by the jump from the Atlantic 10 to the ACC, and she hasn’t shown any reason why she would be, then this has the potential to be one of the biggest additions of the summer.
OTHER NOTABLE TRANSFERS
Kayla Downey, Coastal Carolina to Virginia Tech; Alex Finn, UMass to Stony Brook; Carli Fleisher, Northwestern to Penn; Lindsey Frank, Richmond to Northwestern; Hannah Heller, UMass to Florida; Nicole Humphrey, North Carolina to USC; Johanna Kingsfield, Northwestern to Georgetown; Olivia Penoyer, Yale to Denver; Mary Schumar, Marquette to Northwestern; Melissa Sconone, North Carolina to Hofstra; Payton Vaughn, Yale to Denver.