A midfielder at Manchester Valley High School, Colson shifted to defense at Maryland and starred from the jump. Her footwork made her tough to beat, and her scrappy play and good instincts made her an asset to Cathy Reese’s teams. But she also played in the center circle, winning 324 draws in her career, making her a threat in the middle of the field, too.
“Tonight, we thought it would be a good opportunity to get her running up and down the field,” Levy said.
As Colson stepped to the 11-meter arc with 6:55 left in the third quarter, she looked to the bench. “Do I take this?” she thought. She said after the game the last free position shot she took in a game was probably when she was 17. Just like riding a bike, she figured.
“I just looked over at the sideline and went for it,” Colson said.
She converted, giving the U.S. a 17-0 lead. She liked the taste of scoring so much she decided to to do it again, dodging through the defense two minutes later for another goal.
“I’ve always had that attacking mindset in me,” Colson said. “When you are playing on the defensive side of the ball, you know what the attacking side is thinking. And then vice versa. When I have the ball on the attacking end, I put myself in the defender’s shoes.”
Colson wasn’t the only former Terp defender to score. Alice Mercer, the national defensive player of the year in 2016, notched her first of the tournament on a feed from Emma Trenchard — another defender — in transition.