By any measure, the 2023 season was the best one in the five-year history of the Maryville women’s lacrosse team. Under first-year coach Melissa Gyllenborg, the Saints opened with a record-setting winning streak en route to a 17-3 record.
Along the way, the ascendant program from St. Louis claimed its first-ever victory over a ranked opponent, achieved its first ranking in the national polls and earned its first NCAA tournament berth. Powered by a dynamic offense that finished second in the nation with 18.6 goals per game, Maryville emerged as a legitimate championship contender.
“The turnaround, from having never won more than four games, to still being undefeated after 13 games, was probably the biggest surprise last year,” Gyllenborg said. “They had heart and the will to win.”
No player embodied that commitment more than Sydney Tiemann, who joined the Saints as a transfer shortly before the start of the 2023 season. The attacker from nearby Eureka, Missouri, had spent her first three seasons playing for Gyllenborg at McKendree. When Gyllenborg made the jump from one Great Lakes Valley Conference school to the other after the 2022 season, Tiemann soon followed.
The change of scenery couldn’t have worked out any better.
Playing in Gyllenborg’s high-risk, high-reward system, Tiemann broke the NCAA Division II single-season record with 115 goals and earned first-team All-American honors. Through Maryville’s 4-0 start to 2024, Tiemann has 26 goals and six assists.
But her impact goes well beyond the scoring column.
“Having Sydney transfer here was a huge benefit because she knew us and she was able to help guide the other players in terms of what our standards were, how we run practices, and what expectations we have,” Gyllenborg said. “She was a game changer for us.”