There’s a lot of strong championship pedigree among the four remaining Division I teams in the 2019 WCLA (Women’s Collegiate Lacrosse Associates) Championship Tournament. They have combined to win four of the last five national titles, while adding two other runner-up finishes.
There are no Johnny-come-latelies in this group.
Back-to-back dominating performances by top-seeded Pittsburgh over the first two days of the 2019 tournament has provided ample evidence as to why the Panthers have held the number one ranking since the start of the season.
Pitt made short work of its opponent for the second straight day, utilizing its deep line-up and depth for an 18-5 quarterfinal win over No. 9 seed Cal Poly. Eleven different players scored for the Panthers, who raced out to an early 7-1 lead and never looked back.
“We’re well balanced, everybody plays, and everybody is a threat,” said first-year head coach Kevin Tidgewell. “We play unselfish lacrosse.”
Pitt is the nation’s last undefeated team, carrying a 17-0 record into Friday’s semifinal match against WCLL rival Michigan, the defending champion.
No. 5 seed Michigan Club had to work harder than Pitt to secure its final four spot, breaking away late for a 10-8 win over No. 13 Boston College Club. Tied at 7-7, Michigan outscored BC 3-1 over the final 21 minutes to move one step closer to successfully defending its title. Goals by Emily Roth, Kennedy Mulvaney and Ana Beyer proved to be the difference.
“It wasn’t our best game, but we still had trust that we would pull it out,” said Michigan defender Amanda Riesmeyer, named as the D-I national player of the year on Wednesday.
Michigan, now 15-3 overall, earns another shot at Pitt after losing 14-6 to the Panthers in the league final last month.
Friday’s second semifinal features No. 2 BYU, last year’s championship runner-up, against No. 6 Delaware, the 2017 national champion. Both teams advanced with narrow victories Thursday.
BYU edged upstart Virginia Tech Club, the number 10 seed, 8-7, with goalie Jessica Christensen making a game-saving stop in the closing seconds. Two first half goals by All-American Heather Haight and Haley Harris helped give the Cougars a narrow one goal cushion at halftime.
The score was tied twice in the second half before Haight tallied her third of the game and the eventual game-winner with 20:28 remaining.
Delaware used four goals each from seniors Sarah Tappan and Alexa Woodruff to move past No. 3 seed UCLA, 15-13. The Blue Hens built a 9-6 halftime lead and held off a second half push by the Bruins, who pulled to within one goal twice. Tappan, a key performer on Delaware’s 2017 run to the title, scored the final four goals for the Hens.