US Lacrosse Magazine released the Nike/US Lacrosse Division I Women’s Preseason Top 20 on Dec. 17. Team-by-team previews will be unveiled on uslaxmagazine.com through the end of the month and will also appear as part of the magazine’s NCAA preview edition in February.
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No. 12 Stony Brook
2019 Record: 16-5, (7-0, America East)
Coach: Joe Spallina (9th year)
Assistants: Kim Hillier, Greg Miceli, Kylie Ohlmiller
All-Time Record: 202-106
NCAA Appearances: 7
Final Fours: 0
Championships: 0
2020 Schedule
Date
|
Opponent
|
Feb. 10 |
@ Syracuse |
Feb. 15 |
Ohio State |
Feb. 29 |
@ Florida |
March 5 |
Towson |
March 8 |
Princeton |
March 15 |
@ USC |
March 20 |
UMBC |
March 24 |
Hofstra |
March 27 |
Stanford |
March 28 |
@ UMass Lowell |
March 31 |
@ Hartford |
April 4 |
Vermont |
April 10 |
@ Albany |
April 12 |
Colorado |
April 18 |
@ Binghamton |
April 20 |
@ Johns Hopkins |
April 25 |
New Hampshire |
Save the Date
Feb. 29
For Joe Spallina to properly assess his team, this matchup will be integral. The Seawolves open at Syracuse and then host Ohio State before a two-week break during which Spallina can tinker and fix any issues. Stony Brook is 1-6 all-time against Florida. Two losses came by one goal.
Ally Kennedy and Joe Spallina Understand Each Other Now
Given the intensity with which Joe Spallina coaches and Ally Kennedy plays, one would think the pair would have been a perfect match from the start. But maybe that’s why they weren’t.
Spallina saw something in Kennedy while she dominated for her North Babylon (N.Y.) team that couldn’t always field an uber-competitive squad.
“She had a little bit of an attitude,” Spallina said. “I saw it, too, with the heart of a lion who is super competitive. Surround me with a group of kids with that attitude and that mindset, and we’re going to win a lot of games.”
The Seawolves have certainly won games, posting a combined record of 56-8 in Kennedy’s three seasons with the program, and although her future always seemed bright, the beginning of her career was rocky.
Kennedy and Spallina “butt heads” early on. Spallina, who prides himself just as much on teaching as he does on coaching, saw her potential and sought ways to bring it out. He said Kennedy didn’t always accept the style in which he went about doing so.
“That’s one of the things when you see something in a player, it’s your job as a coach and as a professional to get the best out of them,” Spallina said. “Player development is so important to us here, making a good player great.”
It clicked at the end of her freshman season. After a 13-9 win over Northwestern in the second round of the NCAA tournament in which she scored twice, she went over to Spallina and said, ‘I get it, coach. I get it.’
From there, Kennedy has blossomed not only into a program staple, but a locker room leader. And that’s what makes this season so important, in Spallina’s eyes. With Kennedy and Taryn Ohlmiller both commanding respect and dominating on the field as seniors, he has a strong base with which to work.
“When you look at college rosters, it’s always, when your best players are your seniors, I feel like the overall focus of your team is different,” Spallina said. “Ally Kennedy, to me, she’s a special athlete, she’s a special lacrosse player. She’s proven it on every level.
“The other stuff she does in the weight room, in the meetings … she leads the charge, and she leads loud.”
And because fast-rising junior Siobhan Rafferty will miss the season with a torn ACL she suffered in fall ball, Kennedy’s role could grow even more. With “fast track” freshmen in Charlotte Verhulst and Kira Accettella around her, Kennedy will have the chance to groom the next generation of Stony Brook stars during her final season.
“She has a look in her eyes when she’s competing that’s just different,” Spallina said.