3. Erin O’Grady, G, Michigan
O’Grady has emerged as a hero for Michigan amid a lacrosse renaissance in Ann Arbor. She leads the country with a mind-boggling 68.2% save rate — a feat even more impressive considering Michigan has played opponents like Denver and Colorado. Her best rate of the season? 90 percent in 57 minutes against Jacksonville. Her worst? 52.9% against Colorado. Save percentages aren’t everything, but O’Grady has looked remarkably confident in goal this season. She’s been a key leader for her unit, which ranks first nationally in scoring defense.
4. Isabella Peterson, A, James Madison
A 2023 Tewaaraton Award finalist, Peterson has continued her dominance into 2024. She has tallied a hat trick in every game, leading James Madison to a 5-0 record — including a 19-18 upset win against North Carolina in which she scored five goals. It’s hard to count out James Madison if Peterson continues to roll. Through five games, she’s recorded 31 draw controls, 22 goals and five assists.
5. Izzy Scane, A, Northwestern
The notion that Izzy Scane isn’t the Tewaaraton Award favorite wouldn’t have even crossed most minds entering the season. But the spring is still young, and it’s not like Scane is struggling. Far from it. Northwestern’s new all-time scoring leader has 22 goals and five assists, and if there’s anything to suggest there’s more to come, it’s that she’s shooting a career-low 43.1 percent. If (and more likely, when) that evens out to her career 50.4 shooting percentage, Scane will be right back as a favorite for the award.
Next five: McKenna Davis, A, Boston College; Madison Taylor, A, Northwestern; Emily Sterling, G, Maryland; Chase Boyle, M, Loyola; Katie Goodale, D, Syracuse
Five to monitor: Jackie Wolak, A, Notre Dame; Rachel Clark, A, Boston College; Olivia Adamson, A, Syracuse; Meghan Ball, D, Maryland; Cassidy Spilis, M, Rutgers