JMU has turned to its defense to stop the late momentum of teams like Penn State and Richmond, the latter which rallied with a four-goal run to cut a 13-5 advantage to 13-9 with still five minutes left Saturday. JMU held them scoreless the rest of the way for a 14-9 win.
“A lot of times we get the stops because we’re so confident with how well we’ve played all game, and we know we just need one stop or one draw or one of anything to stop their run,” Warden said. “I think everyone has bought into that concept and everyone believes in that. Just having the confidence and knowing we have everything in control helps. It’s up to everyone correcting the slides and anticipating what they’re going to do. I think we’ve really grown in that area and it shows a lot of maturity by our defense being able to make those huge stops.”
There’s experience all over the field for JMU. The Dukes start mainly upperclassmen along with Johnson on defense and either sophomore Maddie McDaniel or freshman Katie Checkosky at attack. That has helped them keep an even keel and support each other through the ebb and flow of games and the season.
“Any given day, JMU has a different player that can step up for them, offensively or defensively,” Klaes-Bawcombe said. “It’s really our balance. We’re not relying on any one player offensively, any one player on the draw, any one player defensively. The whole team is playing well, so we’re able to manage and handle individual mistakes. We’ve even been talking about it at timeout, that mental resilience that everyone talks about. We’re able to turn mistakes into highlights.
“We have a team that understands the game and understands the moment and makes good decisions,” she added. “We have a lot of field generals out there. We have a lot of experienced and mature players that get it.”
The Dukes are encouraged by their start. But it’s only halfway through the year and conference play hasn’t begun, so nothing has been won yet. There is still room to grow on a JMU team that has been powered as much by its defense as its offense.
“Finishing the game is going to be a huge test for us,” Warden said. “We come out very strong and we get super excited, but when it comes to the second half, just having better game management and knowing a lot of it is going to come down to possession of the ball and taking care of it, especially against teams that are good in transition like UVA and Maryland, that’s going to test our mental game in that aspect.”