Keating is another important cog that returns. In her second season starting, the Towson goalie sat 26th nationally in save percentage at .474.
“With Kiley in goal, we have a rock-solid goalie like we’ve had with Kelsea Donnelly and before that Mary Teeters,” LaMonica said. “Kiley is no different. She’s one of the best we’ve had. It helps to have a great presence in the cage, somebody who has some talent and who is really very level-headed. We really do return a lot. The key factor will be the leadership role.”
Meg Lynch is a senior starter whose sister Molly will join the team on attack and whose brother played for the Towson men. Lynch comes off her best season. Towson will spend the fall assessing what sort of defense it can use more effectively with a few new pieces.
“We put a lot of time in our scheme and strategy,” LaMonica said. “There’s no question that zone defenses force teams to play a certain way. I do think that compared to two or three years ago when some teams were playing zone, you saw teams struggling a lot more with how to overcome it. This past year, a lot of teams continued running zones, and a lot of teams knew how to break zones.”
Conti is ready to up her own leadership role in her third season. She is the first player to be named CAA Defender of the Year in her first two seasons of college.
“Coming in, being on the field and having the help I did with all the older girls was awesome,” she said. “It was like I was guided through my first year and it was really nice. It was like having everyone there for you. And then the second year you come in and you know what to expect so you have to step up a little. As a sophomore, I was still an underclassman, but I knew what to expect and I knew what to do. Coming into my third year, being an upperclassman, you have to do the same for the younger girls that the older girls did for me.”
Conti, her classmates and the Towson seniors will rely on their experience to lead the way at the defensive end.
“No one is ever going to be perfect at it,” Conti said. “You’re always adjusting things and moving things in our zone. We learn something new every practice. It takes time. What’s helped is other teammates and upperclassmen who have been doing it for years really make you feel very confident in every move you make.”
Her top priority will be sharing Towson’s defensive identity with the newcomers, and sustaining its standards that have been established for a Tigers talent pool that continues to grow.
“It’s more of being very confident, not in a bad way,” Conti said. “We have a very confident defense. We all work very well together. Me, Sami, Riley, we got that from freshman year. We came together and learned the defense together in the fall. We went through it together. It really helped us all have our confidence and boost each other up.
“It’s pride and confidence. We all want to help each other out. We’re there for each other on and off the field. I think most teams that are successful have. Our defense is one thing we’re all proud of.”