Over her five years at Loyola, Rosenzweig said she’s never been closer with her teammates. She feels everyone buys into their roles and understands their importance, saying the Greyhounds’ close bonds are clear on the field, too.
Adams said Loyola has always had a tight knit, “cliche” family kind of atmosphere.
“This is a sisterhood,” Adams said. “These gals have each other’s backs, and they’re so supportive of each other and care about each other and love being around each other.”
After COVID-19 affected the 2020 season — and to some degree, 2021 — Rosenzweig said it’s exciting being able to just hang out with her teammates again.
Now, the Greyhounds are taking full advantage of their time together off the field. Spending time at upperclassmen’s off-campus houses is one way Loyola has fostered a sense of community. Rosenzweig’s house hosted a teamwide Super Bowl pot-luck in February and had freshmen over earlier this month to watch Loyola’s men’s lacrosse team play.
Adams said breaking down boundaries between grade levels has been a key part of Loyola’s culture since her arrival. She cited Rosenzweig’s close friendship with freshman attacker Georgia Latch, saying the two have become “inseparable” despite a four-year age gap.
These close bonds off the field have only strengthened the Greyhounds’ performance on the field. It came across in several ways against James Madison, she said, including players’ “uncanny ability” to find each other and multiple scorers stepping up to the plate.
Rosenzweig, Loyola’s leading scorer, didn’t tally a goal in the matchup. But she dished out a game-high six assists — another sign of the Greyhounds’ trust in each other.
“That’s the kind of chemistry we see off the field — the selflessness, having each other’s backs and positivity,” Adams said. “They feed energy to each other, and we saw that in the game. When we get scored on, they’re bringing it together and [saying], ‘Brush it off. We’ll get the next one.’ They feel very confident in each other.”
Adams said the upperclassmen’s leadership has also played a key role in younger players’ ability to “play with maturity.”
While Loyola’s dominance has much to do with its upperclassmen stars, underclassmen are finding their footing as well. Sophomore Sydni Black ranks fifth on the team in goals and recorded a hat trick against James Madison. Black, Latch and freshman midfielder Chase Boyle have all scored 20-plus goals this season, too.
Now, as the Greyhounds approach their date with Boston College, Adams feels her team is up for the challenge. With Loyola’s depth, strong abilities and “a little bit of luck,” she hopes to take her program where it hasn’t been in nearly two decades: the NCAA semifinals.
“We said it in our locker room after the last game: ‘We didn’t come here to do just as well as we have done as a program in recent years,’” Adams said. “‘We came in here to do something Loyola teams of recent years have not done, and that’s get ourselves to a Final Four.’ We’ve got our sights set high.”