Miller was the primary defender matched up on Stony Brook’s two-time Tewaaraton Award finalist Kylie Ohlmiller, though the Eagles threw some wrinkles in that had others covering her as well. Ohlmiller still finished with five points, but the Eagles forced her to work hard for every point.
“Elizabeth was insane,” Walker-Weinstein said. “She was so good. She was so aggressive. She didn’t sit back. She played her aggressively. There was a very dominant presence the entire game from Elizabeth. It was so fun to prepare for that matchup. They’re both superstars, so it’s always fun.”
Miller and the 21-1 Eagles face another huge challenge Friday night in the second semifinal of the NCAA tournament at Stony Brook when they face 20-1 Maryland, who beat them last year for the NCAA championship, 16-13.
“Of course you’re going to think a little about we were so close and now we have to beat Maryland,” Miller said. “You can’t compare it. They’re not the same team, and we’re not the same team we were last year. You have to have that same mentality coming at them. We have to give them all we’ve got.”
Boston College has great balance with an attack that is 11th in the country in scoring, a terrific draw control led by Sam Apuzzo and Dempsey Arsenault, and then the oft-times overlooked defense.
“On the defensive side, we all played last year together so we got to gel,” Miller said. “This year, we really found our footing as a whole unit.”
That togetherness was a key in holding down a Stony Brook team that played without another of its top scoring threats – Ohlmiller’s sister, Taryn – due to a knee injury.
“We just played so well together as a unit and that’s what helped us in the end to play so well against Stony Brook,” Miller said. “Of course our offense had an amazing day too. For our defense, working together, having each other’s backs whenever someone got beat or missed a step, that’s what really held us in there and we were able to come up with big stops. It’s just having each other’s backs and playing as a unit instead of as individuals.”