Michigan’s offense was then able to make the most of its opportunities. Kaley Thompson tied the score at 1 just five minutes in, kicking off a back-and-forth affair that culminated in the Wolverines leading at halftime. Laliberty recorded five first half saves and the Wildcats forced seven turnovers, though, indicating that it wasn’t easy for Michigan, either.
Coykendall said her unit played “frantic” during the second and third quarters, and embracing patience was key to staying in the matchup.
“We know that nobody’s going to roll over for us,” Coykendall said. “That’s the mindset we have to have going forward: stay patient and know that this is everyone’s win-or-go-home game.”
Michigan kept its foot on the gas in the third quarter, limiting the Wildcats to two goals and hanging on to a narrow one-goal lead for much of the period.
But Northwestern’s offense slowly came alive in the fourth quarter, beginning with Coykendall twisting through the eight-meter arc to tie it at 6. Over the next four minutes, Rhatigan and Mahoney joined in to make it an 8-6 game –– the Wildcats’ largest lead of the matchup.
Coykendall said Mahoney’s goal was a difference-maker.
“That was one of those juice goals that gets everyone going,” Coykendall said. “It’s plays like that, where things may not be going well for specific people all game or on the offense, and someone else –– like we talked about having each other’s backs –– scores a huge goal for us. We were like, ‘OK, we’ve got this.’”
Mahoney, who scored with 10 minutes left in the fourth quarter, tallied the final goal for the Wildcats. Michigan scored once more to make it 8-7 with four minutes left, but it couldn’t complete the comeback. The Northwestern defense forced six turnovers in the final quarter.
Perhaps Michigan’s most significant success on Thursday was holding graduate attacker Izzy Scane –– a Tewaaraton finalist and one of the country’s leading goal-scorers –– to her lowest output all season, with one goal and one assist. Nielsen said her defensive coordinator came up with an “unbelievable game plan.”
The back-and-forth nature of Sunday’s matchup provided “an incredible learning experience” for the Wildcats to build on leading into Thursday’s quarterfinal.
“One thing we do well at Northwestern Lacrosse is we evaluate and learn,” head coach Kelly Amonte Hiller said. “I’m very excited for us to evaluate and learn and go forward with incredible fearlessness.”