AMELIA SHEEHAN DROPPED TO BOTH KNEES ON THE TURF NEAR MIDFIELD. She was already holding her own personal NCAA championship trophy. As the public address announcer introduced Sam Geiersbach, Sheehan began to bow repeatedly, as if to say, “We’re not worthy.”
Geiersbach had just continued her semifinal dominance in the championship game, scoring three goals — including the go-ahead goal with 5:26 left — in North Carolina’s 12-11 win over Boston College in the final. She tiptoed the crease and scored while looking at the lined goal circle beneath her feet to give the Tar Heels an 11-10 lead.
A transfer from Richmond, Geiersbach was eager to simply join the Tar Heels this fall. Playing time? That would have been icing on the cake. On a roster brimming with both current and future All-Americans, the graduate student who was an offensive leader for the Spiders came off the bench for the Tar Heels.
“I knew that this was going to be their year, and I just wanted a piece of it, whether I was on the field or not,” Geiersbach said.
She was named the NCAA championship’s most outstanding player.
Every Tar Heel had a role to play in this national championship run. Head coach Jenny Levy began the post-championship press conference by rattling off a list of 15 players who hardly saw the field in the last few weeks of the season.
Sheehan was one of them. A midfielder from Bronxville, N.Y., Sheehan redshirted her freshman season last year and saw action in three games this spring. She scored once against Virginia in the second round of the NCAA tournament.
But Sheehan knows her value rests in practice on the scout team and on the sidelines as one of the leaders of the bench mob. Her voice hoarse after using it often to hype up the crowd or celebrate the achievements of a teammate, Sheehan put it into perspective.
“Not getting to play is definitely a challenge,” she said. “Getting to practice every single day and wanting to get yourself better and your teammates better is the attitude you have to have. I just changed my perspective a little bit. I’m doing everything for my team.”
That team-first mentality extends to the players who rarely leave the field, too. Taylor Moreno started 76 consecutive games to close her UNC career and went 70-6 in that time. But she was pulled during the NCAA semifinal, a 7-minute, 47-second respite on the sideline that allowed her to reset.
Waters first noticed that Moreno might need a break. Barnes agreed. So did Levy.
“What’s unique about our staff is that everyone has played for Jenny and myself,” Barnes said. “They understand what we’re thinking, and they’ve gone through some of the same experiences that we’ve gone through.”
“[Moreno] completely understood what was happening and why it was happening. That sign of maturity in a goalkeeper was amazing. Caylee had that same type of maturity.”
Moreno was candid postgame when discussing her struggles. But instead of marinating in negative emotions, she loudly celebrated freshman Alecia Nicholas, her replacement, who athletically helped kickstart a North Carolina clear.
Lo and behold, Moreno sealed the one-goal win with 28 seconds remaining, making a split save on Northwestern star Lauren Gilbert.
“Really successful athletes tell themselves the truth,” Barnes said. “They’re able to recognize the truth of what’s happening.”