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From the moment she first put on a USA jersey, Ally Kennedy looked like she was shot out of a cannon.

First and First: U.S. Women's Box Pioneers Make History in Utica

November 5, 2024
Brian Logue
Kait Devir / USA Lacrosse

YONKERS, N.Y. — Team One is the theme for the 2024 U.S. Women’s Box National Team.

On Saturday, it was game one – plus three more.

A little over a year ago, the U.S. women’s box program launched with a player ID in Utica, N.Y. More ID and training camps have ensued, but the team got its first official game competition in the Hudson Valley Box Lacrosse League Summer Series playing against men’s teams at the EJ Murray Memorial Skating Center

After falling to a pair of New York-based teams – the Mahopac Water Panthers, 9-5, and Team 845, 10-4 – the U.S. women edged the Philadelphia-based Hairy Pups Lacrosse Club, 8-7, on a late goal from Erin Bakes and a save from Madison Doucette with just 36 seconds remaining.

That set up a rematch with the Pups in the third-place game and the U.S. bounced back from a rough start to post a 10-8 victory to complete the event with a 2-2 record. The Pups scored the first five goals of the game and led 6-1 after the first period in a three-period game. The U.S. flipped the script in the second quarter to tie the game 7-7 and ended up scoring the final three goals of the game to complete the rally.

Emily Hawryschuk put the U.S. up 9-8 with just under eight minutes to play and Taylor VanThof closed out the scoring with four minutes left. Both Hawryschuk and VanThof had hat tricks in the win. “We had a lot of challenges today and I think they answered,” said head coach Ginny Capicchioni. “We'll need that for September.”

Capicchioni is tasked with putting together the U.S. team for the inaugural World Lacrosse Women’s Box Championship in Utica, N.Y., this September. Since accepting the role she’s seen complete buy-in from the sport’s premier women’s lacrosse players, but very few had any box experience a year ago. Every step is a learning process.

“This is the first time we're seeing the team completely together as opposed to splitting the roster,” Capicchioni said. “We’re seeing what works, who works together, but mostly seeing them feel comfortable together. The first two games were very different from the last two games and we seem to be really forming a team.”

“We’re starting to put the pieces together,” said Ally Mastroianni, a member of the 2022 U.S. women’s field team that won the world championship. “I think we know what to do, and we’ve been studying with a lot of chalk talk. Actually putting it into action and seeing it all come together – we had some really great moments and some not so great moments, but I think whatever is happening on the field, we’re learning from it.”

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