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. 6 Princeton
2019 Record: 16-4 (6-1, Ivy League)
Coach: Chris Sailer (34th year)
Assistants: Jenn Cook, Kerrin Maurer
All-Time Record: 415-162
NCAA Appearances: 26
Final Fours: 11
Championships: 3
2020 Schedule
Date
|
Opponent
|
Feb. 15 |
@ Temple |
Feb. 22 |
Virginia |
Feb. 26 |
@ Villanova |
Feb. 29 |
@ Columbia |
March 17 |
@ Jacksonville |
March 21 |
@ Brown |
March 24 |
Florida |
March 29 |
@ Penn State |
April 4 |
Dartmouth |
April 8 |
Maryland |
April 11 |
@ Harvard |
April 18 |
Yale |
April 22 |
Penn |
April 25 |
Cornell |
Save the Date
April 22
Princeton or Penn has won the Ivy League championship every year since 2001 except one, so when these two get together there’s usually a title on the line. Four of the last six Ivy League tournaments have ended with the two squaring off. Princeton holds a 27-22-3 series lead after winning the last five meetings.
Princeton Ramping Up Defensive Pressure
Princeton plans to lean on its experience as it brings a young team up to speed.
That means some early emphasis on defense, where the Tigers return more than anywhere else on the field. Princeton hopes it can use its experience to create more opportunities from its defense.
“It’s a very different team than last year,” coach Chris Sailer said. “We’re working on being able to pressure more defensively. That’s something we’ve been trying to get our kids comfortable with — extending out, pressuring harder on ball, being more opportunistic and looking more for blocks, tips and knockdowns.”
The Tigers had a top-25 defense a year ago but lost more than 50 percent of its scoring and the draw control lost everyone. Princeton is hoping that a defense with standout goalie Sam Fish and returning starters Marge Donovan, Mary Murphy and Olivia Pugh can play more aggressively.
“To some extent, it’s a mindset,” Sailer said. “We have some kids that tend to be a little more stay-at-home and other kids that are trying to take those risks. We’re just trying to get kids all over the field to get out of their comfort zone and to stretch a little more.”
Donovan, Murphy and Pugh combined to cause 57 turnovers. Princeton graduated players that accounted for another 80 caused turnovers, so turning up the intensity could help make up for those losses and keep pressure off Fish, who ranked sixth in the country in saves and 16th in save percentage.
Defensive success will be crucial during the development of the Princeton midfield that is dominated by sophomores and freshmen, and the emergence of the offense led by Tess D’Orsi and Kyla Sears, who between them had 175 points a year ago.
“We certainly have some top talent returning on the team,” Sailer said. “But we just can’t rely on a few kids to do everything all over the field.”