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s the Explorers, coming off a 7-11 season, return to campus for fall ball, Kucia is working her way toward playing in her first meaningful game in two years.
“I want to make everyone proud,” Kucia said. “I want to stay strong and get back on the field and make everyone proud.”
Kucia, a communication major, still has four years of NCAA eligibility. She is taking a step-by-step approach, beginning with La Salle’s run test Wednesday.
“That’s all I try to think about,” Kucia said. “When I think about playing lacrosse again, it kind of scares me because of everything. I’ve been thinking, ‘Let’s just pass the run test first.’ Then we’ll get through the first practice, and then the first game and take it step by step instead of looking at everything, because then I’d get overwhelmed.”
Overwhelmed and anxious is how Kucia felt as she inched closer and closer to honoring her original commitment to Navy. She had been flattered by the offer in her sophomore year, and her parents encouraged the commitment, because they thought it would give the easygoing Kucia more inspiration and drive. It was almost Thanksgiving of her senior year at Carroll when she decommitted.
“The Navy coaches were awesome and I loved all the girls, but that atmosphere just wasn’t for me,” Kucia said. “I just knew I was not going to thrive there. It was definitely rough.”
Kucia felt relief after opening up her college options again, but she didn’t know exactly what schools might still want her.
“Everyone from my class was basically already committed where they were going to be committed, and I didn’t even know what the options would be,” she said. “That was a whole other process. I thought, ‘Maybe this isn’t for me.’”
It was March before Bossell found out that Kucia was available again to recruit. They connected on the phone and Kucia related well to the other players when she visited campus. But on April 1, 2016, leaving a Carroll practice with two of her friends, Kucia was a passenger in the back seat when their small car lost control around a turn. Kucia wasn’t wearing her seatbelt. She ended up on top of the dashboard.
“I definitely learned it the hard way,” Kucia said, “but I learned it.”
While the driver was slumped over the wheel, the front-seat passenger got out of the car. Kucia tried to follow her, but her leg wasn’t moving. Shock was setting in as she surveyed the damage.
“I looked down, and it was basically bone and blood everywhere,” Kucia said. “The first thing I thought was, ‘My leg’s gone.’”
PHOTOS COURTESY OF LEXI KUCIA
Kucia was the passenger in the back seat of a small car when the driver lost control around a turn. Kucia, who was not wearing a seatbelt, ended up on top of the dashboard. She needed skin grafts to repair her left leg.
All three girls made it out of the car and survived the accident, but doctors weren’t optimistic about Kucia’s chances of playing sports again. The mood changed after she had surgery and the surgeon assured the family that it had gone as well as could be imagined. Kucia’s leg that had been sliced open almost surgically in the accident was intact, though she did need skin grafts.
“All they had to do was clean everything out and stitch it back together,” Kucia said. “I had a fractured fibula, but they said I was lucky I didn’t cut an artery or tear any ligaments. I was just the luckiest person.”