Jones clearly inherits a roster that looks quite different than the one that waltzed through a 22-1 campaign en route to the 2022 title.
In addition to Delaney’s departure, UIndy also lost several other key components from its championship team. The program’s two best players — All-Americans Abigail Lagos and Peyton Romig — are both now gone. Lagos, the national D-II player of the year in 2022, transferred to Syracuse, while Romig, the NCAA tournament’s Most Outstanding Player, accepted a position as an assistant coach at Davenport University after finishing her eligibility.
Other key departures included sophomore All-American attacker Sarah Klein, a 56-goal scorer who transferred to Ohio State; four-year goalie Cassidy King; and a pair of impact freshman — Riley Taylor and Kylee Manser — who both transferred to Oregon.
“We can’t worry about the players that we’ve lost, we’ve got to coach up the ones that are here,” Jones said. “We know what we want to achieve. The challenges are high, but the expectations are also high.”
Adding further intrigue to UIndy’s story is the ongoing speculation that it may follow in the footsteps of other recent programs and soon reclassify to Division I, with the Ohio Valley Conference rumored to be a potential landing spot. The school announced on September 30 that its board of trustees had voted to take no action on the issue.
Ironically, the vote by the trustees came just days after UIndy’s athletics director Scott Young announced his resignation after two years on the job. There’s an interim AD, Greg Shaheen, currently heading the athletics department.
While Jones may be the right coach, based on her time at UC Davis, to help guide UIndy to an eventual transition to Division I, the more immediate priority is stabilizing the defending champions who have seemingly been in a state of turmoil since winning the title on May 22.
“My job is to coach this team the best that I can at whatever level we are at,” Jones said. “I’m excited about being here and being at this level, and if there is a change in the future, I’ll be excited about that also. But the focus is to do your job.”
And changes or not, there are still expectations at UIndy. They have a number of accomplished returnees, highlighted by defenders Kara Antonucci and Mekayla Montgomery, and 49-goal scorer Quinn Malcolm, from last year’s championship squad.
“They had a lot to deal with this past fall, but I still see them as being a championship contender,” said one opposing coach. “They have girls who gained good experience as part of last year’s run.”
Jones is counting on that collective experience to help guide her team into the new season and to serve as motivation for the 2023 campaign.
“Once you do it, there’s an itch to do it again,” she said. “Pressure is a privilege.”