CHESTNUT HILL, MASS.
Penn 13, UConn 8
Niki Miles broke Penn’s single-season goals mark and used a five-point day to lead the Quakers to a 13-8 win over UConn.
Miles tallied four goals and one assist. She now has 61 goals this season, passing the previous record set by Julie Heller in 1981 and tied by Tory Bensen in 2015.
Maria Themelis also scored four goals, and Kelly Van Hoesen stopped 10 of the 18 shots she faced.
The Quakers doubled up UConn in the circle, leading in draw controls 16-8. Natasha Gorriaran corralled a game-high seven draws.
Landyn White made 15 saves for UConn. Morgan Carter (four goals) and Lia Laprise (three goals, one assist) led the Huskies’ offense.
PHOTO COURTESY OF PENN ATHLETICS
Niki Miles set Penn's single-season goals record in a 13-8 win over UConn in Chestnut Hill, Mass. She has scored 61 goals this season.
Themelis tallied a first-half hat trick, but it was Miles who gave the Quakers a 5-4 lead when she sprinted through an open lane and beat White with 2:27 left in the half. The goal was the 59th of the season for Miles, setting the program record.
Not that getting by White was easy. The goalie made nine first-half saves, including back-to-back stops against Anna Brandt (one with her legs, one with her stick) with less than 90 seconds left to keep the halftime margin at one goal.
Paige Lipman opened the second-half scoring and put Penn’s lead at 7-5 when she converted a free position at the 13:48 mark of the third quarter. Morgan Carter kept the Huskies in the game, getting the next one. She later stymied a two-goal Penn run when she scored on an assist from Grace Coon and nine seconds left on the shot clock to bring UConn within 9-7 with 4:36 left in the third quarter.
But Penn rattled off the next three goals. Julia Chai scored unassisted at the 2:19 mark. Gorriaran won the ensuing draw, and Miles scored with 1:40 remaining in the third. It was rinse, wash and repeat on the next possession, with Gorriaran getting another draw and Miles extending Penn’s lead to five, 12-7, with three seconds left.
Neither team scored again until the game’s waning moments, when Brandt wove through the UConn defense and gave Penn a 13-7 advantage with 1:15 to play. Laprise scored with 19 seconds remaining, the Huskies’ first goal since 4:36 of the third quarter.
Penn advances to play third-seeded Boston College in the second round Sunday (1 p.m. EDT).
GAINESVILLE, FLA.
(6) Florida 13, Jacksonville 7
Danielle Pavinelli poured in five goals and one assis and Sarah Reznick made 17 stops to lead Florida to a 13-7 win over Jacksonville.
Florida attacker Emma LoPinto added two goals and three assists. Sarah Elms and Grace Hobson each tallied two goals and one assist for Jacksonville.
Florida scored the last four goals of the second quarter, two of which came from LoPinto, for a 7-2 halftime advantage. Pavinelli opened the third quarter with a goal from LoPinto that capped a 5-0 run and put Florida in front 8-2.
But the Dolphins went on a run of their own, starting with a Brianna Samuels score at 11:31 of the third quarter. Elms’ free positions at 4:37 and 4:08 closed the score to 8-5, and Grace Hobson scored three minutes later to make it a two-goal game, 8-6.
But Florida — or, rather, Pavinelli — seized momentum in the final minute of the third quarter. Pavinelli scored on a feed from Maggi Hall with 19 seconds left and then assisted an Emily Diaz tally 13 seconds later, widening the gap to 10-6 heading into the final frame.
Pavinelli kept Florida rolling, scoring 47 seconds into the fourth quarter. And again at the 10:35 mark. And again, with 8:24 left, as Florida’s lead increased to 13-6.
Notre Dame 21, Mercer 6
In the most lopsided first-round result, Notre Dame cruised to a 21-6 victory over Big South champion Mercer. The Fighting Irish will play host Florida a second-round game Sunday.
Notre Dame scored the first 10 goals of the game and never looked back, putting 24 of 35 shots on goal and shooting 60 percent.
Kasey Choma led the onslaught with six goals and four assists. Jackie Wolak also scored six goals.
PHOTO COURTESY OF JMU ATHLETICS
Taylor Marchetti lets her stick fly after one of her three goals in seventh-seeded James Madison’s 12-8 win over visiting Army in an NCAA tournament first-round game Friday.
HARRISONBURG, VA.
(7) James Madison 12, Army 8
Seventh-seeded James Madison got four goals and one assist from Tewaaraton Award finalist Isabella Peterson, advancing to the second round of the NCAA tournament with a 12-8 first-round win over Army.
Taylor Marchetti added three goals for James Madison.
Julia Gorajek (three goals, one assist) and Julia Franzoni (three goals) led the Army offense and fueled a late rally that fell short. The Black Knights’ season ends with a first-ever NCAA tournament appearance and a program-best 15 wins.
The Dukes struck first when Marchetti fired a shot that was deflected into the net at 13:43. It was Marchetti again less than two minutes later. Brianna Mennella found her cutting toward the net, and Marchetti buried a hard shot in the top-right corner for a 2-0 JMU lead.
Army rebounded, pushing the pace in transition after a Lily Boswell turnover. Brigid Duffy scooped the ground ball, ran it herself for the clear and found Gorajek, who powered a shot by Kat Buchanan from the left side of the arc.
James Madison scored four of the next five, with two goals coming from Peterson, and took a 6-2 lead when Tai Jankowski converted a free position with less than six minutes left in the first half. But tallies from Franzoni and Kathleen Sullivan closed Army’s halftime deficit to two.
Peterson scored on an assist from Maddie Epke just over two minutes into the third quarter to put JMU ahead 7-4. The offenses went stale for the next eight minutes, missing a combined six shots, with only one going on net (a Madeline Lenkart free position, which Buchanan saved).
After Peterson missed wide with 7:29 left in the stanza, Army cleared the ball and called timeout. The Black Knights worked the ball around, but Buchanan intercepted an errant Duffy pass.
James Madison broke through on the other end when Lizzy Fox dodged by Marissa Massey and scored low with 4:47 remaining in the frame. Marchetti’s third of the day came on a free position that extended the margin to five with 3:14 remaining in the third quarter.
Duffy appeared to score with less than 90 seconds on the clock, barreling through the Dukes’ defense. But she was called for a crease violation, and Army ended the third quarter without a goal.
In the fourth quarter, Epke circled the cease and scored to put JMU in front 10-4 with 12:45 left.
Duffy got Army on the board in the second half when she netted her first goal of the day at the 10:33 mark. But Peterson fed Katelyn Morgan in front at 8:46, giving James Madison its six-goal cushion back.
Epke’s shovel shot gave the Dukes their largest lead of the day, putting them ahead 12-5 and prompting an Army timeout with 6:50 left.
The Black Knights scored the game’s final three goals, getting two tallies from Gorajek and a free position from Franzoni, but couldn’t claw all the way back.
Maryland 11, Drexel 6
Seven different Terps found the back of the cage in Maryland’s 11-6 win over Drexel Friday.
The box score epitomized balanced scoring — no Terp tallied more than two goals, and even defender Abby Bosco put one in.
Chrissy Thomas tallied a game-high four points on two goals and two assists, and Libby May added two goals and one assist.
Maryland goalie Emily Sterling stopped nine shots. Jenika Cuocco made 12 saves for Drexel, an at-large bid from the CAA.
Sterling stopped seven of the nine first-half shots she faced, and the Terps employed a balanced attack that featured six different goal scorers to jet out to an 8-2 lead through 30 minutes.
Neither team scored in the third quarter until Grace Harding found Corinne Bednarik for a goal at 6:36. But defender Bosco made things fun, going coast-to-coast for her first goal of the season and a 9-3 Maryland lead with 4:55 left in the frame. Katie Sikes scored with 1:53 on the clock to push the advantage 10-3 heading into the fourth quarter.
Drexel kept it interesting, opening the fourth quarter with goals from Hayleigh Simpson, Bednarik and Harding to slice the deficit to 10-6 with 5:32 left. But Thomas iced the game with a goal at 4:11, and the Terps held Drexel scoreless for the remainder of the game.
Maryland enters Sunday’s second-round matchup with seventh-seeded James Madison as the underdog — a rarity for the sport’s most decorated program. The Dukes edged Maryland 8-7 on March 1 at home.
Johns Hopkins midfielder Ava Angello, closely guarded by UMass midfielder Amy Moreau, scored four goals in the Blue Jays' 19-8 NCAA tournament first-round win Friday in Syracuse, N.Y.
SYRACUSE, N.Y.
Johns Hopkins 19, UMass 8
Johns Hopkins scored six unanswered goals in the first quarter and cruised to a 19-8 win over UMass in an NCAA Division I women’s lacrosse tournament first-round game Friday at Syracuse.
Midfielders Ashley Mackin and Ava Angello and attacker Campbell Case scored four goals apiece for the Blue Jays (9-8), who will play second-seeded Syracuse in a second-round game Sunday at 3 p.m. EDT.
First-year Hopkins head coach Tim McCormack brought an up-tempo, pick-heavy offense with him from Arizona State, where he was the two-time Pac-12 Coach of the Year. The style was on full display against his alma mater, UMass, which countered with an aggressive, physical defense pressing out on ball carriers.
More than half of the Blue Jays’ goals were assisted. They shot nearly 50 percent, operating with efficiency UMass could not match with its 20 turnovers and six yellow cards. The teams combined for 93 fouls.
Charlotte Wilmoth scored four goals for UMass (16-3), which also has a first-year head coach in Jana Drummond.
Both Hopkins and UMass qualified for the NCAA tournament as at-large selections.