Levy, who never had a Canadian commit to play at UNC, said Walker-Welch wasn’t easy to find at first. But eventually, other top schools did find her. Playing at Canadian high school lacrosse titan Hill Academy helped with that. On Sept. 1 of her junior year, she had a full inbox.
“It was crazy,” Walker-Welch said. “I almost had to take a step back from my life. Getting cut from that team may have been the best thing that happened to me.”
Walker-Welch had her eyes on UNC and, at that point, looked up to Kayla Wood, a defensive midfielder who shined in transition. Levy thought Walker-Welch was the total package — athletic, aggressive and coachable. Walker-Welch committed.
It’s not easy for a freshman to break into the starting lineup these days, with several veteran players taking advantage of an extra year of eligibility because of the shortened 2020 season. Though UNC has its share of depth — the Heels returned much of their starting offense from last season and added five transfers — defense was an area with cleats to fill. Wood and two other standout defenders, Catie Woodruff and Caroline Wakefield, graduated.
Walker-Welch came in as a midfielder, but after three weeks, Levy decided to have her focus on defense.
“We said, ‘You know what? She’s someone we could see starting and competing for a starting position on our defensive end, so why don’t we just focus her on one end of the field right now as a freshman?’” Levy said. “She started taking off right away. That was a pretty natural fit for her.”
On the defensive end, Walker-Welch has capitalized on her box lacrosse roots.
“She’s really good off-ball,” Levy said. “She understands when people are dangerous and going to shoot. She has really good instincts because the box game makes you think fast and react fast.”
But Walker-Welch still had some fine-tuning to do, like running the ball up the field in transition instead of making a bad pass and getting better at 1v1 defense. She credits Trenchard, goalie Taylor Moreno and junior defender Emily Nalls for helping her make adjustments.
“If I were to mess up something, they didn’t yell at me,” Walker-Welch said. “They encouraged me to try something different that would help my style.”