Jamie Lockwood started her second game of the season in goal, but gave way to Gabbe Cadoux, who was coming off a concussion, just before halftime. Cadoux finished with six saves in front of a defense that has changed its parts plenty this year while looking for its best lineup. Consider Gigi Vasile, a freshman who won ACC Defensive Player of the Week in the first week of the year, hasn’t even played in three of the last four games.
“They’ve been an incredibly unselfish unit,” Kimel said. “They get that they may not start or may not play much in a week because there’s not a great matchup for me. If you’re doing well on the field, you’re not just going to pull kids in a game. You’re going to keep the chemistry going if you feel people are moving and sliding well. We’ve made an example of them as a unit with how selfless they are. That group has been very unselfish for us. They kind of don’t care. They just want the job done. We’ve had kids going from playing 10 minutes in a game to starting and having a huge matchup and doing really well. … The depth and versatility is a strength of ours right now.”
Kimel says even though they are young, it’s the deepest group of defenders she’s had.
Humphrey has been a regular in the lineup even going back to last year. Junior Charlotte Tucci has played in all 11 games, while another junior, Michelle Staggers, only returned to the lineup from injury two weeks ago. Duke started a freshman, Natalie Kahn, against Virginia. Anne Slusser, a senior with 35 games of experience coming into the season, has rotated in along with Vasile and Jackie Perry.
“Anne had a great game against Syracuse,” Kimel said. “She’s a senior who’s played a lot for us, and she’s had some games where she hasn’t seen the field. You would never know with how she’s acted. She just gets it and she’s really unselfish.”
The Blue Devils have found a formula that is starting to pay off at the defensive end. Duke relies on a midfield that is young, too, with freshmen Abby Landry, Cat Barry, Katie Cronin and Katie Cosgrove mixing in with sophomore Lindsey Reynolds, junior Ellie Majure and senior stalwart Maddie Crutchfield.
“We’re all mixed up during practice, so I think we’re all pretty used to playing with whomever whenever,” Humphrey said. “We have a set of standards for every single defensive player when you’re out there, whether it’s me in the faceguard or someone else. … Whom I’m playing with doesn’t worry me because I think we all hold each other to a pretty high standard.”
Humphrey, whose sister Stuart graduated after playing for Duke last year, has taken on more responsibilities this year after starting 12 of the 17 games in 2017, leading by example and being vocal. She already has more ground balls in 2018, leading Duke with 23, and has a team-high 12 caused turnovers.
“We had a pretty solid senior (Devon Russell) who did most of our faceguarding last year,” Humphrey said. “I don’t think I did at all last year, which was great, because I felt like I got to learn the key fundamentals of team defense before stepping into that role where you’re not as involved with the slide packages. This year has been kind of a whole new thing for me.”