In Division II, Loyola stormed to a 10-0 halftime lead and never looked back to claim its first WCLA championship. The Greyhounds were nearly flawless at both ends of the field during the opening 30 minutes to take total control.
Sophomore Kelly O’Krepkie, named the tournament’s most outstanding attacker, finished with eight points on four goals and four assists as she directed the offense. Michaela Smith finished with four goals and three assists, and senior Madison Craft, the tournament’s most outstanding midfielder, scored a game-high five goals.
“We knew how much this one meant to us, and we came out strong and energized,” Craft said. “Today was one of the greatest games we’ve ever played.”
While the offense was executing to near perfection, the defense also performed in tight cohesion, holding Denver to its lowest scoring total in four years. Junior Joanna Messina was named the tournament’s most outstanding defender and Kendra Farrell was selected as the most outstanding goalie. She finished with 12 saves, including eight stops in the first half shutout.
Loyola’s win avenged its loss to Denver in last year’s championship game.
“We knew we were going to kill it today,” said team tri-captain Emma Gristina. “We talked a lot this season about last year’s loss because it left a bitter taste in our mouth. We knew this was our year.”
With today’s victory, the Greyhounds finish 14-2 on the year with a season-ending 11-game winning streak. Loyola also improved to 16-6 all-time in WCLA Tournament play, the most wins of any D-II program. They had two previous national runner finishes, in 2010 and 2017. This time, they captured the big trophy.
“The energy was so much different this year,” Messina said. “It felt like our time had come.”
Loyola’s 11-goal margin of victory was the largest ever in the D-II championship game. The Greyhounds finished with 68 goals in four tournament games, the second highest total in tournament history.
Saturday’s Division I Consolation Bracket Games
3rd Place: Virginia 15, North Carolina 8
5th Place: Georgia 12, Delaware 9
7th Place: Pitt 9, San Diego State 8
9th Place: BC 19, Cal Poly 7
11th Place: UCLA 18, Colorado 10
13th Place: Penn State 12, St. Mary’s 9
15th Place: Texas 14, Oregon 13
Saturday’s Division II Consolation Bracket Games
3rd Place: Vermont 16, Providence 10
5th Place: New Hampshire 18, SMU 6
7th Place: St. Thomas 12, Grand Valley State 8
9th Place: Utah State 9, St. Ben 8 (2ot)
11th Place: Portland State 9, Oakland 8
For full results from the US Lacrosse WCLA Championship Tournament, please visit uslacrosse.org/wcla2018.