The Maryland women’s lacrosse team lost nearly as many games in the last two seasons (10) as it did the previous 10 — a decade of dominance in which the Terps compiled a 215-13 record and won five NCAA championships.
Proclamations of the dynasty’s demise, however, could yet prove premature.
No. 5 Maryland answered a scoreless second quarter with an eight-goal explosion in the third, defeating No. 10 Virginia 17-13 in Charlottesville, Va., on Friday.
Johns Hopkins transfer Aurora Cordingley provided the spark, scoring all four of her goals in the second half and adding two assists in the victory, which moved the Terps to 3-0 heading into another top-10 showdown against Florida next week.
With both teams shooting near 50 percent, the game between Maryland and Virginia turned into a matter of heavyweight offenses exchanging haymakers. The Terps led 6-4 after the first quarter, with Libby May scoring four of her game-high five goals in the frame.
But the Cavaliers (2-1) won five of six draws in the second quarter and shot 5-for-6 to take a 9-6 lead into halftime.
Maryland flipped the script in the third quarter, though, pouring in eight unanswered goals, including two in the last 20 seconds to take a commanding 14-9 lead. The Terps won seven of nine draws and outshot Virginia 14-3 in the quarter. All 14 shots were on goal.
Then back came the Cavaliers, who pulled within one in the fourth quarter before Cordingley iced the win with two straight goals and Hannah Leubecker (four goals) provided an insurance tally.
Rachel Clark and Ashlyn McGovern scored four goals apiece for Virginia, which shot 6-for-6 on free positions. Goalie Ashley Vernon made 12 saves in the loss. The Cavaliers host No. 13 Princeton on Sunday.
STATEMENT WIN FOR USC
It’s just the second Friday of the Division I women’s lacrosse season, and in the span of 10 days, three ranked teams have already fallen in upset fashion. USC provided the latest surprise.
Shelby Tilton scored with 49 seconds remaining, lifting the Women of Troy in a seesaw matchup against No. 19 Jacksonville — a program whose stock looked ready to rise thanks to Virginia Tech’s Wednesday win over No. 14 James Madison.
Instead, it’s now USC that’s on the map, thanks in large part to Tinton but also thanks to a six-goal run in the third quarter that flipped a 7-4 deficit into a 9-7 lead. Jacksonville scored three straight to retake the lead from there, but the 6-0 run was still a game-changer.
After Alyssa Arnold fed Jenny Kinsey with 13:45 left in the game for a 10-9 Jacksonville lead, Tilton, Ella Heaney and Maddie Dora scored during another USC run, this one putting the Women of Troy ahead 12-10.
Jacksonville (1-1) again rallied. Sarah Elms took it upon herself to score twice in a 48-second span, the second of which tied the score at 12 with 2:06 left. Claudia Shevitz won the ensuing draw for USC, setting up the Tilton winner.
Now 2-0, USC is trending upward.