Nearing the end of the Selection Show on Sunday, Johns Hopkins players were nervous.
Players and coaches alike watched as the bracket slowly took shape, the Blue Jays nowhere to be found. Nerves worsened as the teams playing at North Carolina, Johns Hopkins’ playoff destination in 2019 and 2021, were revealed and the Blue Jays weren’t among them.
Finally, watching the last pod of the bracket come together, Johns Hopkins’ overwhelming anxiety quickly turned to absolute excitement.
Everyone began jumping, hugging and screaming at the news their season would live on.
“What you saw was pure joy that we got another week together,” coach Janine Tucker said. “We went from a lot of stress to a tremendous amount of joy in about two seconds.”
Now, the Blue Jays are going dancing. Johns Hopkins will make the short trip to College Park to take on Duke on Friday. The winner gets Maryland, the tournament’s No. 2 overall seed.
But after finishing the regular season 10-7 and the Big Ten 2-4, it wasn’t clear what the Blue Jays’ tournament odds were. Johns Hopkins faced eight ranked opponents throughout the regular season, including the likes of Stony Brook, Northwestern, Loyola and Maryland. Their only ranked win came over Drexel in February. They were a bubble team come Selection Sunday.
For Tucker, the NCAA tournament bid confirmed the “ups and downs” of scheduling tough competition were worth it.
“It felt like [a] stamp of approval that said, ‘You guys challenged yourselves,’” Tucker said. “‘You put yourself in tough situations, and this is it paying off.’ I was really proud of that.”
Graduate goalkeeper Kathleen Garvey said the Blue Jays are excited for the opportunity to prove themselves, especially coming off a loss to Maryland in the opening round of the Big Ten tournament. She said that loss left a “sour taste” for Johns Hopkins and didn’t show the team at its best.
Johns Hopkins lost several important pieces after last season. Its top three goal scorers from 2021 either graduated or transferred, and defensive standout Trinity McPherson graduated, too. Tucker said she had to retool the entire unit, working to figure out who fit best where.
Several younger players, like midfielders Madison McPherson, Abbey Hurlbrink and Jordan Carr, have stepped up as a result. Garvey said she’s been especially proud of these players’ growth, saying their confidence has soared as the season has gone on.