Ellie DeGarmo was a little surprised to find out that she was the IWLCA’s 2016 C. Markland Kelly Goalkeeper of the Year for Division I.
It wasn’t that she doubted her abilities.
“I didn’t even know there’s a goalie of the year,” DeGarmo said. “I didn’t know there was anything besides the Tewaaraton. I feel dumb now. It was a huge honor. I was incredibly humbled and honored to receive that.”
But DeGarmo certainly is not dumb. She’s a Princeton University senior in its Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs with a minor in global health and healthy policy. She also is a lot more concerned with how her team is doing than with any individual honors.
“She’s better if she goes about her business,” said Princeton coach Chris Sailer. “She hasn’t seemed outwardly that she’s been really worried about that, following up on last year. She’s just being Ellie.”
That’s good enough for Princeton. DeGarmo, who led the country in save percentage for most of last year, is right back at it. She sits fourth in the nation at 57.6 percent, and Princeton jumped to No. 5 in the latest rankings with its 5-0 record, its best start since it went 10-0 to open 2008.
“We’re bringing back a lot of starters who have played together for a while,” DeGarmo said. “We’ve been working on the foundation that we’ve developed last year and the years before. It’s really coming together.”
Princeton eased away from No. 11 Notre Dame for a 14-8 win Saturday. It was its most complete and most impressive win of the young season.
“I thought it was really decisive,” said DeGarmo, who made nine saves. “It felt like everything really came together. A lot of us came off the field saying, 'That’s what a really good lacrosse game is supposed to feel like,' shutting them down on defense, getting the hustle plays, getting the 50-50 balls, the attack flowing well and looking for each other. And lots of scorers. I think we had eight different scorers and seven different assisters. Across the board, it was such a great performance. I think we felt really good after that game.”
The offense was led by Olivia Hompe, who scored her 200th career point, as part of a four-goal, one-assist performance. Tess D’Orsi, whom Princeton moved out of the midfield this year, had two goals and two assists. Six different players recorded turnovers.
“We are good all over the field,” Sailer said. “That’s one of the strengths of the team. We’re incredibly well balanced. We have seniors leading the way in every position on the field, from goalie, defense, midfield and attack. With that kind of leadership and experience, it bodes well for the team.”
Hompe is a standout on offense. The midfield got a huge boost with the return of Anna Doherty. She headlines a midfield that is the biggest change for Princeton this year.
“That’s a much stronger, more experienced group,” Sailer said. “Anna Doherty is back leading that group. Anna was out with an ACL. She missed last year. Camille Sullivan, she was the one who had a year of experience. She was a sophomore. Ellie McNulty was a sophomore, but had an injury and missed all of her freshman year. Then we had two freshmen, Kathryn Hallet and Elizabeth George. To that group, you add Anna Doherty back in and a freshman Annie Cory.”
While last year Princeton played a 5-2-5 and subbed out its extra attacker or defender, depending on which end it was on, the Tigers have used their newfound depth in the midfield to be more dynamic. Their scoring has improved dramatically, up more than 50 spots in the nation rankings from 62nd last year to 10th now.
“We’re much more threatening off the fast break. Our ride is much better,” Sailer said. “It’s been an area of strength for us and something we’ve been able to use effectively this year. I think we have a group that they like to run and they like to play fast. It’s different than in the past. Sometimes they’re playing as if we have a 20-second clock. We’re getting a ton more shots this year than in recent years. It’s definitely more of an up-tempo game that we’ve been playing. Our settled offense is getting better and better. We’ve been making a lot of strides. We want to be equally strong in both of those areas. We’re learning how to take care of the ball better. That’s an area we can still improve on, decreasing our unforced errors. If we do that we’ll be an even more threatening unit.”
Olivia Hompe tallied a team-high five points on four goals and one assist in Princeton's 14-8 win over Notre Dame on Saturday.
With the offense and midfield clicking at a higher rate, and an assortment of players learning to handle their biggest question mark on the draw control, that leaves the defense. Princeton has a lot of confidence in the back. Alex Argo, Madeline Rodriguez, Amanda Leavell and Nonie Andersen have looked sharp on defense in front of DeGarmo, allowing only 8.4 goals per game, 11th best in the country.
“They’re so solid,” DeGarmo said. “We lost two line D last year, but most of them return. We’re returning a lot of experience. We have a very experienced D and they’re all extremely solid. I feel very safe with them.”
Having DeGarmo adds confidence. She is in her third year starting. She didn’t see the field as a freshman, but she was able to unseat Annie Woehling in the first game of her sophomore year. The season before, Woehling had seven saves to hold Maryland to its fewest goals in more than a calendar year.
“I went into it really just wanting to be able to play and show myself,” DeGarmo said. “It ended up being that first game. I went in against Loyola, I had four shots and made three saves. I kept playing.
“Annie handled it with such incredible grace. It would have been easy for her to get really frustrated or down on herself. She turned it right around and was my biggest cheerleader and biggest support system. I’ll always remember that was an amazing thing to do because it would have been so much easier to just do the opposite. I look up to her for that.”
DeGarmo made a big jump last year in her second season starting. Her 53.6 save percentage ended up second and her 10.06 saves per game was fifth.
“My coaches were saying, 'You’re so much more consistent than the year before,'” DeGarmo said. “I honestly don’t know what I would attribute that to, maybe having the experience and a year under my belt, and just being more confident. I really don’t know what I would point to. Just staying as calm and composed as I possibly can. I try to do that as best as I can.”
Despite DeGarmo’s success in college, she hasn’t tried to play for a national team. The U.S. under-19 women's national team wasn’t on her radar when she was at the Bryn Mawr School in Maryland, and last year she didn’t try out for the World Cup team.
“I’m kind of kicking myself about that now,” DeGarmo said. “I was in San Francisco the weekend tryouts were held. Now, I wish I had made the effort to go back. It wasn’t an easy endeavor for me at that time. I wish I had. I just signed up for the semi-pro draft for this summer.”
DeGarmo has the respect of others. A rival coach in a preseason preview called her the best ball stopper in the NCAA. She has come through with some incredible saves in her first two years starting for Princeton.
“It’s very much reflexes more than anything,” said DeGarmo, who hones her hand-eye coordination with frequent juggling at practice. “A lot of the time, I don’t even know how I got here. It’s just weird. It’s quicker than my mind goes. Another thing that makes me successful, the less I think about the shot or even the individual players, the better I am. I don’t try to think [that] 'No. 5 always shoots high.' I don’t listen to that at all. If I start anticipating, I’m a lot less successful.”
Sailer believes that her poise makes her one of the top goalies to have suited up for Princeton. Earlier this year, Loyola stormed back and a DeGarmo turnover aided them. But DeGarmo stopped their free position shot with one second left in the 15-14 win.
“Lesser goalies would have crumbled in that situation,” Sailer said. “She ended up making a huge save to win the game for us. When have someone back there with the experience she has and sees the ball so well and stays unflappable, it’s so awesome. It gives your defense confidence, they can take some chances. Whenever the opponent shoots, we feel we have the chance to get the ball back.”
DeGarmo’s play last year helped propel Princeton to its third Ivy League title in three years. But the Tigers lost in the semifinals of the Ivy League tournament and then were upset by UMass in the first sudden-victory overtime game in NCAA tournament history, 13-12.
“That was a tough ending,” DeGarmo said.
It adds some motivation as DeGarmo tries to raise the Tigers higher this year, who host No. 8 Penn State next Tuesday. Princeton is eyeing another Ivy title and a much deeper run in the NCAA tournament.
“We have this extra drive,” DeGarmo said. “I especially feel it as a senior. I don’t know if it translates with the whole team. It seems like there’s this incredible energy and this sense that we could do something great if we put in the work.”