TOWSON, Md. — Boston College’s national championship purgatory has ended. Syracuse’s suffering continues.
In an NCAA women’s lacrosse championship game between teams perennially on the cusp, the Eagles used a second-half surge and a record-setting performance by Tewaaraton Award finalist Charlotte North to defeat the Orange 16-10 and capture their first national title in front of 5,405 fans at Towson’s Johnny Unitas Stadium.
“We had a dream a long time ago that we were going to win a championship, and people told us we were crazy,” Boston College coach Acacia Walker-Weinstein said. “We just did it.”
Playing in its fourth straight final, BC got a Texas-sized performance from North. The Dallas native and Duke transfer scored six goals, eclipsing Stony Brook’s Courtney Murphy for the NCAA single-season record when she scored her 101st goal on a free position with 16:39 remaining.
They’re the only two Division I players — male or female — ever to reach the century mark. North finished with 102. She came to BC after the Eagles fell to Maryland in the 2019 NCAA championship game, their third straight year falling short in the final.
“From the first phone call with Acacia in June 2019, I felt it right away,” North said. “I could feel the passion and the culture and the bond.”
North’s arrival helped offset the graduation of BC’s “Big Three” of former Tewaaraton winner Sam Apuzzo, 2019 WPLL MVP Dempsey Arsenault and two-sport star Kenzie Kent.
“We were destroyed by it temporarily. But we picked up the pieces,” said Walker-Weinstein, who found solace in the words of BC men’s ice hockey coach Jerry York, the winningest coach in NCAA history. “He said to trust the process. And at some point, at the right time, divine timing will come in and things will fall into place. Charlotte was a blessing to our program.”
Walker-Weinstein could be seen stifling her smile even after North scored on an empty net with 1:11 remaining to ice the win. North did the same, chomping on her mouth guard before the ensuing draw.
“We were just focused,” North said. “Locked in the whole game.”