Dora said there was a bit of rust to shake off after missing the bulk of her junior season. Even though Dora participated in an Under Armour event last summer, she mostly had to work out on her own.
She said taking on that responsibility and having to take classes virtually helped Dora gain independence.
“I think for everybody during the pandemic who is playing in college, it would definitely help them because in college it is a lot more, ‘You have to do what you have to do’ and be responsible for yourself,” Dora said. “I think it made me appreciate how much I enjoy being with my teammates and being with everybody.”
Godby said that by the state finals, teams were so keyed in on Dora that her teammates were left open to score. The result was that Dora became more of a distributor in the closing stretch of the season.
The Eagles won their final 19 games by a margin of five goals or more.
Like most high school squads, the team was forced to make sacrifices in order to play games amid a pandemic. Dora and many of her teammates opted to learn virtually and skip prom. The eschewing of such activities was worth it, Dora said.
The other sacrifice Dora and her teammates made was not facing out-of-state challengers. In 2019, Milton faced the likes of Georgetown Visitation (D.C.) and Bishop Ireton (Va.). This year, Milton was relegated to a mostly in-state schedule.
“One of the most memorable experiences I had was when we beat Bishop Ireton my sophomore year,” Dora said. “That was proof that we, Milton, can compete with the teams up north, and I feel like Georgia doesn’t get as much credit as the girls from Maryland or Long Island.”
Even with all of her accomplishments in Georgia, Dora still feels she has something to prove when she gets to USC. Part of what attracted Dora to the California college is the fact that lacrosse is still growing on the West Coast, much like how the sport is growing in Georgia.
Now she hopes she can be just as a big a contributor for USC as she was for Milton.
“I just got a feeling when I stepped onto campus, and I was like, ‘This is somewhere I want to be,’” Dora said. “Coming from Georgia, that is not a super developed lacrosse area and being able to go to the West Coast and play a game that is predominantly played on the East Coast is such a cool experience. Lacrosse is such a fast-growing sport, so [I like the idea of] being part of something special at USC, and the coaches are amazing and the girls are amazing out there, so when I stepped on campus, it was somewhere I wanted to be.”