TOWSON, Md. — Taylor Cummings and Charlotte North went to work. Set up on the left wing, Cummings drew two Canada defenders in close, giving North the centimeter of space needed to turn on the jets and blow right past them.
She scored on a low laser as she fell to the turf, putting the U.S. women’s national team up 3-2 in an eventual 16-11 win in the opening game of the 2022 World Lacrosse Women’s Championship.
Cummings, arguably the best player in the world, and North, possibly the heir apparent, working a two-woman game on the wing? It’s a dream come true for lacrosse fans. Twitter was ablaze Wednesday night talking about both the individual displays — like Sam Apuzzo’s BTB on the doorstep that earned the No. 8 spot on SportsCenter’s Top 10 — and the fantasy-like combinations on the field.
“I get like so irrationally emotional watching this [U.S. women’s national team] play,” Katie DeFeo tweeted. “It’s a collection of my childhood heroes and the dopest girls that are my age. It’s just such a loaded roster.”
James C. Foote, the Flagler men’s lacrosse assistant, replied to DeFeo and took it a step further.
“I don’t know if this could be the best USA [team] ever or if the names are just so damn household that it seems that way, but this is a phenomenal collection of talent,” Foote said.
Indeed, Jenny Levy’s roster is impressive. That’s probably an understatement. It effectively bridges the gap between superstars many players emulated while they were growing up — like Cummings, Kayla Treanor and Meg Douty, just to name a few — and the stars continuing to elevate the sport today — like North, Ally Mastroianni, Emma Trenchard and others.
Roster building is, of course, an intentional exercise. Every possible combination is tested over months of training camp and hours upon hours of dissecting film. Sticking with veterans would theoretically help with team chemistry. Players who’ve been in the U.S. system for awhile will inevitably have had more time together, after all.