North came to Duke from the Episcopal School of Dallas, where she also played field hockey and basketball. She was a three-time all-state selection in lacrosse and her team’s Most Valuable Player, earning all-district honors as a junior and earning conference and state titles as a senior.
The accolades and attention didn’t start building until after she began her college search as a sophomore, yet North was determined.
“No matter what time you’re recruited, you have so much potential,” North said. “It’s just what you choose to do with your time and how hard you’re going to work until you actually get there.”
Because her older sister, Claire, attended Duke, North reached out to the school’s coaching staff during the spring of 2015 and immediately caught Kimel’s eye.
“We have always tended to recruit a little later than other people, so we had at least one spot left,” Kimel said. “We’re good about reading all our recruiting emails and clicking on videos, and this was a kid who I walked down the hall to my staff and said, ‘I just sent you something. You need to look at it.’”
They were instantly sold.
North visited the campus that summer, and by August, she committed.
“She was from Texas and we did recruit later, so we always talk about our last-spot kids,” Kimel said. “We’ve had some pretty great ones, and quite honestly, from some nontraditional areas, like Caroline Cryer, who was a great player and a [2007] Tewaaraton finalist for us that was a last-spot kid from Colorado.”
Though a New York native, Duke’s Carolyn Davis, a 2009 Tewaaraton finalist, was also a last-spot kid, Kimel said.