What a day. Regular-season finales, conference tournament matchups and some all-around great lacrosse highlighted Saturday’s Division I women’s slate.
Let's jump into the results.
MARYLAND CLAIMS BIG TEN TITLE OUTRIGHT
No. 3 Maryland is the outright Big Ten champion for the sixth time in seven years. The Terps, who upended reigning champion Northwestern last weekend, downed No. 19 Michigan 13-8 Saturday in Ann Arbor.
Eloise Clevenger posted a career-best six points and four goals, while Libby May finished with two goals and two assists, and Aurora Cordingley had two goals and an assist for Maryland (15-1, 6-0 Big Ten). Emily Sterling had 12 saves. The Terps will play fourth-seeded Johns Hopkins Friday in the Big Ten semifinals hosted by Rutgers.
The Wolverines (10-6, 2-4), who needed a win to get into the Big Ten tournament, will wait and see if they get an at-large bid into the NCAA tournament. Caitlin Muir tallied one goal and four assists.
The Terps’ attack moved the ball through well through Michigan’s zone defense, which entered the weekend ninth in goals allowed per game (8.53), in the early going. Maryland’s first three goals were assisted, starting when Shaylan Ahearn hit a charging Clevenger for a score at 12:44 of the first quarter. Muir evened the score at 1-1, but the Terps responded when Clevenger found May in front at 9:57. May played the role of feeder when she assisted a Cordingley goal with 5:17 left in the first quarter.
Cordingley bounced one past Arielle Weismann for an unassisted score to open the second quarter, and May followed with a free position goal at 11:59 to extend the Terps’ lead to 5-1. May and Clevenger played give-and-go, with Clevenger finishing with 10:20 left in the first half. Meanwhile, the Michigan offense stalled, failing to get a shot off in the second quarter until Mead took one at the 7:43 mark, which Sterling saved.
Muir broke up the 5-0 run with a goal at 5:43, but Victoria Hensh buried a free position with 4:04 until the break to extend the lead back to five, 7-2. Mead closed the gap to 7-3 with a shot from the 8-meter with 45 seconds on the clock.
Maryland grabbed momentum early in the third quarter, with Hannah Leubecker and Clevenger finding the back of the cage at 13:23 and 13:10. Michigan scored two of the next three, getting within four when Kaley Thompson dodged through the Maryland defense and scored to make it 10-6 at 4:12. But that’s as close as the Wolverines would get. Shannon Smith took a feed from Cordingley and scored less than a minute later, and Leubecker found the back of the cage with seven seconds left in the quarter.
The pace of the game slowed in the fourth. Neither team scored until Mead broke through at 6:28, but Grace Griffin’s tally at 5:03 put Maryland ahead 13-7. Michigan’s Kelly Poole scored the final goal of the afternoon.
NO. 12 PRINCETON CLINCHES IVY REGULAR-SEASON TITLE
For the seventh time in a row but the first time since the pandemic began, No. 12 Princeton is the Ivy League regular-season champion. The Tigers (12-3, 7-0 Ivy League) handed Yale (10-5, 6-1) its first Ancient Eight loss of the season, 17-14.
Kyla Sears turned in a seven-point day on five goals and two assists, while Grace Tauckus added four goals for Princeton. Sam Fish made a season-high 17 saves.
Olivia Penoyer led Yale with three goals and two assists. The Bulldogs will be the second seed in next weekend’s Ivy League championship tournament.
Princeton never trailed, but the momentum swung in both directions. The teams scored in three-goal spurts from the end of the second quarter to the beginning of the fourth. Sears scored twice, and Kate Mulham buried a shot from the 8-meter to give Princeton a 10-6 lead at the half.
But Yale swung back to open the third quarter with goals from Jenna Collignon, Penoyer and Sophie Straka to get within one, 10-9, at 10:42. Tauckus scored at 9:33 of the third quarter, and Sears added a pair to give the Tigers a 13-9 advantage. One from Fallon and two from Penoyer made it a one-goal game, 13-12, with 5:07 remaining in the third quarter.
Nina Montes scored the final goal of the quarter, and Kari Buonanno and Tauckus opened the fourth with tallies to widen the gap back to four, 16-12, with 6:32 to play — an insurmountable lead for Yale.
MANHATTAN WINS TRIPLE-OVERTIME THRILLER
Down 10-4 to No. 3 Niagara at halftime, No. 6 Manhattan looked down and out.
But the game is 60 minutes long — or, in this case, 69:31. Manhattan stormed back to beat Niagara 16-15 in the opening round of the MAAC tournament.
Grace Lipponer finished with six points, including the game-tying and winning goals, and Meghan Rodino scored six times for Manhattan (11-7, 4-4 MAAC). The Jaspers will play No. 1 Monmouth in the conference semifinal round Friday.
Niagara’s Lois Garlow led all scorers with eight points on six goals and two assists. The Purple Eagles’ season ends at 9-9 overall and 5-3 in conference play.
Manhattan came alive in the third quarter, using a 6-1 run to climb to within one, 11-10, when Meaghan Rodino scored at 1:31. A pair of Niagara goals in the final minute of the quarter put the Purple Eagles up 13-10.
The Jaspers didn’t relent. Ava Fernandes capped a 3-1 run and tied the score at 14 with 7:51 left in regulation. Garlow got the lead back for Niagara with 3:41 on the clock. With 5.9 seconds to play, Lipponer broke free of TaNia Cunningham and scored to tie it at 15.
Michelle Messenger stopped three shots for Niagara in the opening six minutes of overtime, and Manhattan’s Ashley Gambardella turned back a pair. Niagara’s Lexi Carne had a chance with 1:51 left in the second overtime, but her free position shot hit the post. With six seconds on the clock, Lipponer fired a shot that went wide. But she got redemption moments later. Andrea Liotta won the draw to start the third overtime, and Lipponer charged towards the cage and buried a shot 31 seconds in.
FURMAN, WINTHROP MOVING ON IN BIG SOUTH TOURNAMENT
No. 3 Furman jumped out to an early lead and held off No. 6 Winthrop for a 16-13 win. The Paladins (8-7, 7-2 Big South) will face No. 2 Mercer in the Big South semifinals Friday at 1 p.m.
Hannah Dintino led Furman with five points on four goals and an assist, and Anna Roser scored four times. Lilly Rathbun made 11 saves.
Alyssa Angelo netted a hat trick and added two assists for Winthrop (4-14, 3-6).
Furman looked like it had the game in hand, not allowing Winthrop to score consecutive goals for more than 25 minutes. The Paladins used a 4-0 second-quarter run to build an 11-4 lead when Anna Roser scored her third of the day with 6:26 until halftime. But the Eagles scored the next four, and Katie Witmer closed the gap to 11-8 before the break.
Winthrop outscored Furman 4-3 in the third quarter to pull to within two, 14-12, on a Lauren Asher goal with 34 seconds remaining. The two teams traded goals in the first five minutes of the fourth quarter, with Meaghan Beal finding the back of the cage for Furman at 12:42 and Angelo doing the same for Winthrop at 10:36. The game remained scoreless for more than six minutes until Dintino broke through to put the Paladins ahead 16-13 with 4:29 to go in what was the final goal of the day.
In the second game, Jada Preston’s eight-point day and game-winning goal with 20 seconds left lifted No. 5 Gardner-Webb over No. 4 Campbell 15-14. Eilish Gately chimed in with two goals and three assists for Gardner-Webb (10-8, 5-4), who will play No. 1 High Point Friday.
Sam Bischoff had three goals and three assists for Campbell (10-7, 7-2). The game was close throughout.
Bischoff put Campbell ahead 10-8 with an unassisted tally at 3:58 of the third quarter. But the ‘Dogs responded with a 5-0 run and took a 13-10 advantage when Gately found Preston for a goal with 8:51 to play. But Campbell didn’t go quietly. The Camels scored three of the next four, evening the score at 14 on a Lexi McDaniel score at 1:29. But Lauren Deaver circled around the cage and fed Preston on the doorstop for the game-winner.