Indeed, a 22-10 edge on draw controls was Maryland’s most glaring statistical edge. It was a considerable turnaround from the teams’ regular-season encounter, when Penn State forged a halftime tie in part because of a draw control advantage before Maryland secured a 16-14 triumph.
“Last time we played Penn State, we were really lacked on the draw area of our game, so I wanted to make sure personally I could step up and help the team on the draw side,” Hartshorn said.
Possession is a reasonable explanation for Penn State’s offensive output. The Nittany Lions scored their fewest goals since a 9-8 defeat of Cornell on Feb. 25, and Maryland kept Steph Lazo (Penn State’s points leader) to just a goal and an assist and leading scorer Madison Carter to a single goal on four shots.
It doesn’t adequately cover Maryland’s ruthless offensive efficiency. With crisp ball movement, the Terps made 10 of their first 14 shots and never led Penn State cut its deficit to less than five in the final 40 minutes.
“They have a lot of scorers,” Penn State coach Missy Doherty said. “As coaches, we could have done a much better job of providing players a better scheme to defend them. I thought we did that in the regular season, and unfortunately in this game we didn’t give them the best plan for stopping.”
Reese was understandably pleased with how effectively the Terps got open throughout the semifinal, a contest that it many ways underscored the blueprint for Maryland’s success throughout this season.
Whittle (first team), Stukenberg (second) and defender Nadine Hadnagy (third) all landed All-America nods in 2016, but roles were considerably different for the Terps this year. Yet with seven 30-goal scorers, Maryland’s record remains unblemished since its Memorial Day weekend stumble against North Carolina last May.
“There were a lot of unknowns going into the season and a lot of people that questioned where Maryland would be — ‘Does Maryland even have the talent or the ability to make it back to the final four?’” Reese said. “These guys really buckled down and pulled together and created that identity for themselves.”
It’s an exaggeration to play up Maryland as a possible underdog. It isn’t. But it isn’t invulnerable, as a quarterfinal scare against Stony Brook suggested.
Six days later, the Terps got back to who they had to become post-Cummings — balanced, steady and not reliant on a single player —and the result was a drubbing that booked passage to their customary place on the final day of the season.
“We won the way we wanted to win, and I think that’s the big contrast between last week and this week,” Stukenberg said.