The immediate future wasn’t as bright as they had hoped. But the 6-9 overall record and winless Big Ten 2022 season don’t tell the whole story. Penn State wasn’t rolling over in every game. The Nittany Lions lost to Princeton, Ohio State and Michigan by one goal. The idea of flipping that script quickly became something to rally behind heading into 2023.
“Last year was definitely a frustrating year for us,” Gilmore said. “We learned from it, and it gave us experience in tight games. Those losses prepared us to come out on top this year.”
Toward the end of 2022, which Penn State ended on a three-game losing streak, Doherty made it clear: Things would get better — quickly.
“I told them, ‘You’ll feel the difference in the fall,’” Doherty said.
Doherty was right. After the summer, the Nittany Lions came back more assertive in practices, and it’s spilling over into games as the calendar officially hits spring. Gilmore exemplifies the shift. She scored 19 goals last season and already has 18 in 2023, including six goals in the Nittany Lions’ upset of Princeton.
“Maybe it was nerves, or maybe it was feeling like I couldn’t go to goal,” Gilmore said. “This year, I felt like I needed to step up … I’ve taken what I learned those past two years and bringing it in this year, tweaked the small things, played composed and shaken off those underclassmen nerves. I see the potential of this team.”
The potential was evident during a 4-0 start and even an 11-7 loss to a Top 20 Loyola team. Then, it happened again — Penn State lost by one to Vanderbilt on March 8. Here we go again? Not quite.
“You can learn a lot from losses if you handle and analyze them the right way,” O’Neill said. “We have to fight for 60 minutes even if the other team goes on a run. We have to not get quiet … and working together on offense when one thing isn’t working.”
The Nittany Lions made noise three days later. They led Rutgers, last year’s Big Ten tournament runner-up, 8-4 heading into the fourth quarter and held off a late push to secure the win. Against Towson on March 14, Penn State did, in fact, flip the script, winning by one — 13-12. Down 10-7 at the break to Princeton on Saturday, the Nittany Lions rallied, with Gilmore scoring the final two goals in the 16-14 win.
“Rutgers, Towson and Princeton have been good turning points,” Doherty said. “There are different things to learn every game. We’re at a point in our season where we’ve seen a lot, whether it’s zone defense or two-man.”
But it’s more than playbooks and stat sheets. There’s been a culture shift, a product of a now-veteran line-up.
“We took some lumps last year against those teams with multiple fifth years,” Doherty said. “Now, we’re the older team playing some younger teams that just graduated some veteran leaders. I could even feel it in some of those games against Towson and Princeton — there wasn’t a panic in our offense, whereas you felt that before. That emotional stability from the older players a lot of times gets you those close wins.”
The win may have put Penn State into the rankings for the first time this season, but the Nittany Lions have tunnel vision.
“It’s really easy to get caught up in rankings and the polls and records,” Gilmore said. “But we need to continue to take each game one by one and focus on going 1-0.”
Doherty is of that mindset, too. But she’s not putting a cap on what this year’s team can accomplish. The Nittany Lions were at-large bids each time they made the Final Four.
“I think it’s limitless,” Doherty said. “I look at those Final Four years, and it’s not like we were undefeated those years. Keep chipping away, keep getting better, be your best at the right time — that’s what we need to do to finish the season. Where that takes us is yet to be determined, but I am certainly excited to just work with this group.”