Significant wins made all the difference Sunday night in the unveiling of the 29-team NCAA Division I women’s lacrosse championship field.
“Significant wins were important in our evaluation process,” said committee chair Samantha Eustace, head coach of Mercer. “Because there were so many upsets, it was not as clear as in years past and was lots of extra work for the committee.”
Northwestern and Boston College were obvious choices as the Nos. 1 and 2 seeds, but after that, how the committee would apply the selection criteria to seed the remaining 27 teams would prove vital.
The 2024 national committee is comprised of Eustace as chair, Suzette McQueen (executive senior associate director/SWA at Kent State), Bonnie Rosen (Temple coach), Jessica Grasso (deputy commissioner at the MAAC), Cathy Reese (Maryland coach), and Lindsey Thomas (director of women's athletics/associate AD of operations at Florida).
Ultimately, piling up big wins mattered most up and down the line. For example, No. 3 seed Syracuse boasted five wins over top 20 competition, while Maryland’s seven top 20 wins overcame lackluster home losses and a 2-3 record in April to earn a somewhat surprising No. 4 seed.
Virginia also racked up the top 20 wins (six) to gain the No. 5 seed, which was five spots higher than their RPI of 10.
From there, No. 6 seed Yale (four), No. 7 seed Notre Dame (three) and No. 8 seed Penn (five) got the right mix of top wins and a solid RPI.
“When we are looking at the teams, Maryland had a lot of significant wins,” Eustace said. “Those were something that were important to the committee — having those wins.”
Later, Eustace added that Virginia also got a boost by beating Boston College and Notre Dame to solidify their holding of the fifth seed.
“We spend a lot of time going through the criteria as they’re written,” Eustace said. “We take care that we’re paying attention and putting together the best bracket we can.”
Eight-loss Duke gets in
In the theme of significant wins, one team received a major benefit — Duke.
The Blue Devils beat Virginia 15-10 on March 30 but went 2-3 the rest of the way, including a 12-goal loss to Notre Dame, a five-goal loss to North Carolina and a 14-goal drubbing by Boston College.
“For Duke, their win over UVA was what put them in,” Eustace said. “It’s always really tough when you get to the last couple of teams, and they don’t play each other or have common opponents.”
Duke, the 31st team in the RPI, jumped several teams ahead of it including two that it lost to — Navy and Clemson, both of which were omitted from the field.
Colorado left out
The team that missed out was Colorado. The decision came down to significant wins.
“They didn’t have any wins over a top 20 program,” Eustace said.
Mind you, Colorado had as many wins over NCAA tournament teams as Duke. The Buffs beat Penn State on the road. Moreover, Colorado’s RPI was seven spots higher than the Blue Devils.
Other teams passed over by the committee according to the RPI were No. 22 Navy, No. 23 Brown, No. 25 UMass, No. 27 Clemson, No. 28 USC and No. 29 Harvard.
The MAAC is a two-bid league
One of the most surprising results on Sunday was that Niagara knocked off No. 1 seed Fairfield in the MAAC championship game. The Purple Eagles earned the automatic qualifier, while the Stags had to hope their resume was good enough to get in.
This will be the first time in league history that the MAAC has multiple teams playing in the NCAA tournament.
History makers
The 2024 bracket is full of first timers.
The Purple Eagles will be making their debut, joined by America East champion Binghamton, ASUN champion Coastal Carolina and NEC champion LIU.
In a conference championship weekend when the surprises came late, each of the teams listed above had to beat the No. 1 seeds on their home fields to make the NCAA tournament.