The Victory Tour Continues
Charlotte North has had quite a lot of fun since winning the national championship with Boston College on May 30.
The Eagles star who tallied an NCAA Division I women’s record 102 goals en route to the national title flew back to Boston with the trophy in hand on June 1. The next day, she and her teammates met Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker for a championship celebration at the State House.
On June 3, U.S. women’s national team star Abby Wambach tweeted her support and excitement for North. Two days later, she and a number of her Boston College made the trip to Gillette Stadium, where they watched North take home the 2021 Women’s Tewaaraton Award at halftime of the PLL opener.
After throwing out the first pitch at Fenway Park and moving right to TD Garden for a Boston Bruins playoff game, North could turn her attention to her next challenge — a shot at the U.S. national team.
“It’s surreal. It hasn’t really sunk in,” North said of what she accomplished in 2021. “I’m just so grateful to be here. The college game is really fast but the best players in the world are even faster. I’m trying to hang with the superstars out there.”
North, who became one of the most popular lacrosse college players in recent memory, put on the red, white and blue for the first time on Wednesday. She stood alongside players whom she had idolized — especially Michelle Tumolo and Boston College assistant Kayla Treanor.
She also had the chance to play with fellow Eagles’ teammate Belle Smith, as well as assistant Sam Apuzzo and alums Kenzie Kent and Dempsey Arsenault. The contingent was both comforting for North and a testament to the program’s growth in the past five years.
"To get to finally play with all of them, it’s unbelievable," she said. "I’m really blown away. Seeing them on the biggest stage is even cooler than I could have imagined.”
Treanor Enjoying Tryout Process as Veteran
Kayla Treanor joined the U.S. women’s national team pool shortly after it took home gold in the 2013 world championship. Then a star at Syracuse, Treanor was eager to prove she could compete with the best players in the world.
Almost four years and a grueling tryout process later, Treanor made the final cut for the 2017 world championship team, which made a run to gold in England. She led the U.S. throughout the championship, setting a program record with 43 points en route to gold.
Treanor took the field for the national team for the first time since 2019, along with nine other members of that team. When she starred in 2017, Treanor was a 24-year-old attacker just two years removed from Syracuse.
Now, she makes up a core of talented veterans who will hope to lead the next generation of U.S. stars to another world championship.
“Some people come in and right away they’re in a World Cup and I’ve had four years before my first one, and now four years after,” she said. “I’ve been in this process for a long time, but there’s certainly a lot of joy in being back on the field and playing again.”
Among the U.S. hopeful this time around are Boston College stars Belle Smith and Charlotte North, two players that Treanor coached to the national title less than two weeks ago.
When Treanor began playing with the national team almost eight years ago, she took the field with her Syracuse coaches, including Tumolo. Just four years later, the roles are reversed, but Treanor is just as thrilled.
“I love playing with the kids I coach,” she said. “I loved playing with my Syracuse coaches when I started with the U.S., and now being able to play with Charlotte and Belle, it’s amazing. There’s a lot of unbelievable talent in the college game this year, and to see them play a great brand of lacrosse, it’s exciting. They are really competitive and fit in great and are pushing the pace.”