US Lacrosse Magazine released the Nike/US Lacrosse Division I Women’s Preseason Top 20 on Jan. 2. Team-by-team previews will be unveiled on uslaxmagazine.com through the end of the month and will also appear as part of the magazine’s NCAA preview edition in February.
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No. 3 North Carolina
2018 Record: 17-4 (6-1 ACC)
Coach: Jenny Levy (24th year at UNC)
All-Time Record: 329-113
NCAA Appearances: 20
Final Fours: 10
Championships: 2
A quick glance at North Carolina’s roster shows just four seniors and one graduate student. Compared to the six seniors on last year’s roster, the Tar Heels might appear to be even younger.
But make no mistake, this is a much more experienced Carolina team than a year ago. Last year, UNC had to replace nine graduated starters and while the season didn’t end with a national championship, it’s hard to argue with the results.
“I thought we did a pretty good job, winning the ACC and making it to the final four,” said head coach Jenny Levy, who led the Tar Heels to the NCAA title in 2013 and 2016. “It was not the end of the season we wanted. None of us were satisfied with that last weekend of play.”
Carolina’s season ended the way it began — with a loss to eventual national champion James Madison. But along the way, the Tar Heels handed Maryland its only loss of the regular season and earned revenge over Boston College to win the ACC title with an impressive 14-11 victory that was BC’s only loss heading into the NCAA tournament.
There’s plenty of positive for Levy and her staff, which welcomes back Katrina Dowd, an assistant on both title teams, to build from. The Tar Heels welcome back 12 players that started at least five games last season, including attackers Katie Hoeg and Jamie Ortega.
Ortega lived up to the hype as the nation’s No. 2 incoming recruit by Inside Lacrosse. She was the ACC Freshman of the Year, set a UNC freshman record with 70 goals and her 86 points were the second most in Carolina history, trailing only the 89 that Hoeg set in a breakout campaign.
That duo meshed right away.
“It ended up being really, really good,” Levy said. “We thought it was possible, but we didn’t know how quickly it would happen.”
Levy had confidence in Ortega in key moments right off the bat. In at February victory over Maryland, Ortega had the ball in her stick and drew the attention and respect that opened up All-American Marie McCool for the game-winning goal. Against Boston College in the ACC title game, Ortega poured in six goals, including three in a five-goal run early in the game that put the Tar Heels in control.
“We’ve had so many great players, and they’re all different,” Levy said. “We don’t compare them. What makes Jamie special is that she’s so humble. She wants to be great and she makes things look easy when they’re not.”
Levy loves the excitement that freshmen bring to the program and she’s got another special one in Elizabeth Hillman, the No. 1 ranked recruit by Inside Lacrosse and a member of the U.S. U19 training team. Hillman is one of three U.S. U19 players in the class, joined by Kimber Hower and Brooklyn Neumen. Levy expects Hillman, Neumen, Gabbi Hall and Taylor Warehime to make an immediate impact while Hower, a goalie, will redshirt behind Taylor Moreno and Elise Hennessey.
Having two goalies is nothing new for Carolina, which famously road the tandem of Megan Ward and Caylee Waters to the 2013 national championship and they’ve got two solid keepers again. Moreno got hot down the stretch, making 56 saves in the four games leading into the national championship game and finished the year with a 54.1 save percentage. Hennessey also has plenty of experience, starting 13 games last year and finishing with a 10-2 record.