WHITE HOUSE WELCOME
While most of the team took a flight from Chicago back home to enjoy the remaining weeks, Baker joined Lydia Colasante, Shea Dolce and Emma LoPinto on a plane headed for Washington, D.C.
On Sunday, the quartet of Boston College stars were honored at the White House along with approximately 40 other collegiate programs that won national championships in the 2023-24 school year.
“It was a huge event,” she said. “We got to see a little bit of the White House inside, and then they took us outside. It was a big lawn party.”
For Baker, the middie from Ithaca, N.Y., it was just another moment in the summer of a lifetime. She’s been part of a national championship run that concluded on May 26, made the U.S. U20 final roster in July and will serve as a captain of the team.
She hadn’t entertained the thought that she’d be leading a group of talented women in the most unique lacrosse experience she’s had, but Baker said she’s ready for the challenge.
“It’s a disposition, in order to make this team, you have to have it,” she said. “I was a little bit surprised, a little bit excited. I know being one of the older girls on this team and going through this process, previously with the U18 and U16 Select teams with Maddie and Brigid, it’s just incredible to be named alongside them.”
Baker plays with a toughness. A superfan of Sidney Crosby and a lifelong hockey player, she might have been able to play another sport in college.
However, Baker is less interested in being the next Kenzie Kent. Lacrosse is more than enough for her.
“I did think about [playing hockey],” Baker said. “I don’t know if my hockey skills were quite there, but I like to have all my eggs in one basket. I like to be bought into whatever I’m doing. I figured one sport would be better than two.”
DUFFY GETS HER OTHER TEAM’S BLESSING
Duffy, too, had a unique destination upon leaving Northwestern last week. The Army junior headed right back to West Point to continue taking summer classes — something she does to ease the workload during the spring season — and to shadow physicians at Keller Army Community Hospital.
What makes Duffy’s road to Hong Kong, China, unique is that she’s spent parts of the summer training to play for Army in another sport. Most years, she’s in the thick of preseason for the Black Knights’ women’s soccer team.
She left the Army soccer team last fall to play in the USA Lacrosse Fall Classic, but the journey to Hong Kong next month presents an entirely new challenge. It’s one for which Duffy and her many teams are willing and ready.
“I went to the Fall Classic for one weekend and then the Army-Navy [soccer] game right after, so that was a crazy switch up,” she said. “It’s a lot different this summer because I actually have the time to prepare myself, lacrosse wise. I’m able to focus on soccer when I need to, but take some time off to travel to Northwestern, and I was so grateful for that.”
Duffy will miss four of the Black Knights’ soccer matches in order to chase gold with the U.S. team. Army women’s soccer coach Tracy Chao, a colleague of women’s lacrosse coach and Tumolo, gave her full blessing to Duffy to pursue the dream of playing in Hong Kong, China.
“[Chao] has been so supportive, and she hasn’t hesitated once, encouraging me to go to Hong Kong,” Duffy said. “She wants me to take every opportunity I can with this USA experience. She’s asking me how it’s going and when I’m leaving. I always tell them how sad I’m going to be because I’m missing so many games, and they’re like, ‘No, this is an opportunity of a lifetime. Go have fun, and we’ll be back waiting for you and cheering you on.’”