CAA
Is any conference more unpredictable?
James Madison is the top seed, and though they dominated their first five CAA games, they left the door open with a puzzling loss to Delaware. Now they have to face the No. 4 seeded Blue Hens again in the CAA semifinals.
“Honestly, we just need to be better all over the field,” said JMU coach Shelley Klaes-Bawcombe. “It was the same feeling we had as a team after two weeks of play leading into our conference opener with Towson. We just needed to be better if we wanted to win the game. Effort, attitudes and team work, every aspect of the game. Delaware is a good team and earned the win. We have moved on and are ready for another game.”
Delaware needed back-to-back wins over James Madison and Drexel just to get into the CAA tournament, and they can use that desperate attitude in the tournament. They are the one CAA team that will not get into the NCAA tournament unless they win the title.
The other semifinal pits tournament host No. 2 Towson against No. 3 Elon. Elon is just outside the Top 20 and Towson is just inside at No. 18. Both have had encouraging wins and some tough losses. Their semifinal game will give a big boost to the NCAA resume for the winner.
“If we continue to concentrate on the little things, competing as hard as we can and having fun we can play really really well,” said Elon coach Josh Hexter. “I absolutely believe our regular season resume is enough to get us in. We scheduled five ACC teams and beat two of them on the road. Plus we don’t have a single ‘bad’ loss.”
Just as Elon would love to avenge a loss to Towson in the regular season, Towson would love another shot at James Madison after they lost to them in their CAA opener.
"Our squad is coming into form, which is key," said Towson coach Sonia LaMonica. "While confidence is high, the strong message being sent is to remain humble and hungry, which our players are taking to heart. We simply have to keep improving our game if we want to come out on top in conference and go the distance in May. "
PHOTO BY JOHN STROHSACKER
Cornell hosts the Ivy League tournament for the first time in program history.
Ivy League
Does hosting help or hurt Cornell?
The Big Red earned the No. 1 seed and the right to host the Ivy tournament based on goal differentials after finishing in a first-place tie with Penn and Princeton at 6-1 in Ivy action. Any of the top three could win the Ivy tournament and it wouldn’t be a surprise. Cornell has lost two of its last three games at its Schoellkopf Field and is 4-3 at home this season, 6-1 on the road. Cornell knocked off Harvard, 13-6, Saturday and will have to do it again in the second semifinal Friday night.
"Cornell is honored to host the 2017 Ivy League tournament," said Big Red coach Jenny Graap. "We take pride in traveling well and earned a lot of victories on the road this season, but we are excited to defend our Ivy Tournament title on Schoellkopf Field."
The first semifinal on Friday matches the two highest ranked teams of any conference semifinal pairing when No. 2 seed Penn faces No. 3 seed Princeton. Penn’s offense was the story in their first meeting, a 17-12 win by the Quakers, but they lost leading scorer Caroline Cummings for the season in that game.
“We have a lot of injuries this season and not much depth and each person who plays attack needed to step up their game and score more points for us to be competitive,” said Penn coach Karin Corbett. “They have really come together and are fighting for her and for each other. I’m really proud of them in how they have handled so much adversity this season.”
Princeton is anxious to prove that wasn’t its best game, and Penn is hoping it can get by Princeton again for another shot at a Cornell team that shut them down, 10-4, in the regular season. The final is slated for Sunday.
“We’ve got to be ready for how hard Penn moves on offense and defense,” Princeton coach Chris Sailer said. “We can’t start slow and we must compete on the 50-50 balls. Offensively, we’ll look to be more patient [against] their zone and discerning on our feeds, and defensively we have to move better, be alert on cutters and be ready to slide and crash sooner.”
Harvard is a dark horse. They lost overtime games to Boston College and Syracuse and lost by a goal to Stanford. If they should somehow pull back-to-back upsets to earn the Ivy’s AQ, it could give the league four teams in the NCAA tournament.
MAAC
Is there any chance Canisius looks ahead?
They’ve won five of the last six MAAC titles, yet after returning nine starters from last year, top-seeded Canisius can’t get caught looking at the potential to pull an NCAA upset without winning another conference crown. They host No. 4 Niagara in one semifinal Friday, while No. 2 seed Fairfield takes on No. 3 Marist in the other with the final slated for Sunday.
NEC
Can anyone buck a NEC trend?
Since Northeast tournament play began in 1998, only once has a team that did not win at least a share of the regular-season title win the tournament. That favors top-seeded Bryant, which is 7-0 at home and hosts the tournament and fourth-seeded Sacred Heart on Friday in the semifinals. Second-seeded Robert Morris, the only NEC team to keep a contest within five goals, hosts defending tournament and third-seeded Wagner.
PHOTO BY JOHN STROHSACKER
As the No. 1 seed, Loyola hopes to win its fourth straight Patriot League crown.
Patriot League
Can Loyola make it four straight?
Only one team in Patriot history has won four straight tournament titles – Navy from 2010-13. For the fourth straight season, Loyola is the No. 1 seed, and they are looking to continue their strong finish after starting the year 0-6 out of conference. The Greyhounds host fourth-seeded Boston University in the semifinals Friday after BU beat fifth-seeded Lafayette, 14-7, on Tuesday in the quarterfinals. Second-seeded Navy plays third-seeded Lehigh, which stopped sixth-seeded Bucknell, 15-5, on Tuesday.