Defenders Jameson Kernaghan, Kayleigh Pokrivka and Kristen Andreychak were stellar in limiting Queens’ top scorers Kyleigh Masteran and Rebecca Kinsley to just one goal each while combining for seven caused turnovers. Queens finished with 26 turnovers in the game.
“Our defense has been the pillar all year and they really stepped up, playing man-down in overtime,” said ESU’s Xeni Barakos-Yoder, now in her seventh year as head coach at her alma mater.
For Queens, which finished as national runner-up last year, it was a bitter ending to its Division II tenure. The university is reclassifying to Division I starting July 1.
“This one hurts for sure,” Queens coach Clare Short said. “We’ve had a perfect season and we wanted two more wins. Today wasn’t our day.”
UIndy defender Kara Antonucci keeps the ball out of reach of her opponent during the Warriors’ 11-6 win over Adelphi in the NCAA Division II women’s lacrosse semifinals at Lindenwood's Hunter Stadium in St. Charles, Mo.
UINDY 11, ADELPHI 6
Two of the nation’s top defenses took center stage in the second semifinal, locking down the offenses, creating turnovers and limiting the scoring chances. The game had strong similarities to the March 16 meeting between the teams in which Adelphi prevailed 7-5.
Adelphi was making its 14th final four appearance; UIndy, its first. But in the end, that difference in experience didn’t matter. Led by defenders Kara Antonucci, Amy Vegh, Bella Shore and Mekayla Montgomery, the Greyhounds proved that the moment wasn’t too big.
Tied 4-4 at halftime following a tightly contested opening 30 minutes, the UIndy defense held Adelphi scoreless for 22 minutes and limited the Panthers to just two goals in the second half, allowing the offense time to create some separation.
Paced by two goals by sophomore Sarah Klein sandwiched around a behind-the-back goal by junior Quinn Malcolm, one of her game-high three goals, UIndy outscored Adelphi 3-0 in the third quarter on the way to an eventual 11-6 win.
“I think we knew that if we played together as a unit, we were unstoppable,” Antonucci said. “We made it our goal to have this be one of our best games, and I truly think it was.”
With the victory, UIndy (21-1) avenged its only loss of the year while also extending its school-record winning streak to 16 games.
“The toughness, both mentally and physically of our group, along with the desire and the compete level, I couldn’t be more proud,” UIndy coach James Delaney said. “No matter what, I knew they were going to find a way.”
All-American midfielder Peyton Romig added two goals, both in the fourth quarter, and two assists for UIndy. Romig also helped the Greyhounds to a 14-5 edge in draw controls.
Kerrin Heuser and Christina McCabe finished with two goals each for Adelphi (18-3), which tallied its lowest scoring output of the season.
“You have to give them credit, they were the better team out there today,” Adelphi coach Pat McCabe said. “They executed their plan better than we did.”