Molly Garrett became the first Michigan women’s player ever added to the Tewaaraton Award Watch List last Thursday.
The junior midfielder has been a key part of a lot of program history lately. Every time she and her Michigan teammates have stepped on a field, they’re looking for more.
“The mood is different,” Garrett said. “It’s walking out on the field with our heads held high and our chests out like, ‘We’re going to come out and win this game.’ It’s not just going to be, ‘Hey, let’s see if we can do it.’ It’s, ‘Hey, we’re going to do it.’”
A 17-2 win over Kent State back on March 8 set a record for wins in a season with eight for the sixth-year program. Michigan hasn’t stopped since, reeling off four more wins, including a 16-5 win over Niagara on Monday, to move to 12-0, one of only three unbeaten teams in the country.
“It’s all excitement,” Garrett said. “That’s really what it is every game. Ever since we won that seventh game and going on, it’s a new record we’ve been making every single game. I think it’s been very, very exciting.”
The 12 wins match their total from the previous two seasons combined – five wins in 2017 before head coach Hannah Nielsen was brought in and produced the old program mark for wins in a 7-10 debut season in 2018.
“I thought last year we lost some tight games and when we would review games, I thought it was a lot of inexperienced mistakes,” Nielsen said. “We expected to be better, but this much better? I don’t know if you can expect to be 12-0. We haven’t played a perfect game yet. Some early games, we were almost lucky to win. We definitely expected to turn things around and be better this year. This much better, is a bit of a shock. When we see how hard the girls are working, we knew we’d be successful.”
Michigan actually holds a 14-game winning streak that stretches back to a blowout win over East Carolina that was followed by a season-ending 12-11 victory over Penn State, their first win over a ranked team ever, and it came from an incredible comeback. Catherine Granito scored off a feed from Garrett to tie the game with six seconds left, and Maggie Kane scored off the draw control as time expired for a 12-11 mentality-changing win.
“That really gave us the confidence to come out this season and do what we’ve done so far,” Garrett said. “After Penn State, everyone going home for summer, everyone had that drive and mentality to put in the work knowing what we can do. Coming into the fall, we had a great fall and then going home for winter break, I think everyone still had that mentality. Now, we’re here in season and it’s every day now putting in that work.”
Michigan has newfound confidence that continues to grow alongside their experience. Bianca Brueckner was the only graduating starter from last year’s team, and returning a far more experienced group has keyed the rise.
“We gained a lot of it last year,” Nielsen said. “Everyone on the field currently are players that were on the field last year. The lessons we learned last year or things that weren’t going our way were because of experience. They’re learning lessons week to week. Confidence and experience have really helped us this year.”