Each year, we at US Lacrosse Magazine pore over the top coaches, players, games, performances, breakthroughs and moments for this annual “Best of Lacrosse” edition.
We took the debate to Twitter and let our 65,000-plus followers @USLacrosseMag have the final say. Here are the 2017 winners.
PHOTO BY JOHN STROHSACKER
Best Men’s Coach
And the winner is...
Maryland coach John Tillman
How could we not give a nod to the coach who ended the Terps’ 42-year NCAA championship drought?
Tillman never hid from the history. Even though he had led Maryland to five NCAA final fours and four national championship games in his first six seasons, he acknowledged the seventh season would be incomplete without that elusive title — especially considering how painfully close the Terps came in 2016, culminating in an overtime loss to North Carolina in the championship game.
Maryland had some strong personalities in its locker room, including Tewaaraton Award winner Matt Rambo. Tillman struck the perfect chord that allowed them to take ownership of the journey and play loose while also staying true to the disciplined approach that has become a hallmark of his teams.
— Matt DaSilva
PHOTO BY JOHN STROHSACKER
Best Women’s Coach
And the winner is...
Navy coach Cindy Timchal
Amanda Towey took a red-eye flight from San Diego to Philadelphia just to be there when the Navy women’s lacrosse team won its NCAA second-round game over UMass.
“I flew back right after the game to be back at work Monday,” said Towey, a 2008 Navy graduate. “At that point, I was thinking, ‘They’ve never gotten this far before, I have to go to this one. Who knows when they’ll get back here again?’ And then it just kept going.”
Indeed the journey continued — through defending NCAA champion North Carolina and into the final four, the first for a women’s team from a service academy in any sport.
“It was incredible,” Towey said. “I got emotional about it. It was cool.”
Timchal, architect of eight NCAA championships at Maryland in the 1990s and 2000s after coaching at Northwestern in the 1980s, became the first coach to take three different teams to the NCAA tournament. The other three teams in the NCAA semifinals — Boston College, Navy and Penn State — were coached by players whom Timchal mentored in College Park.
Perhaps a similar legacy is beginning in Annapolis.
“I just feel like we’re getting started, though,” Timchal said. “That’s how we feel about coming off of last season. This is just a start. This is not just this little Cinderella ride.”
— Justin Feil
Best Men’s Player
And the winner is...
Maryland attackman Matt Rambo
The Tewaaraton winner led Maryland to its first NCAA championship since 1975 and became the Terps’ all-time leading scorer along the way. He finished the season with 42 goals and 45 assists, moving his career totals to 155 and 102, respectively.
Rambo, a 5-foot-10, 210-pound attackman, arrived in College Park as a ballyhooed recruit and lived up to the hype especially on the sport’s biggest stage. He averaged five points per game in the NCAA tournament.
— Matt DaSilva
PHOTO BY JOHN STROHSACKER
Best Women’s Player
And the winner is...
Stony Brook attacker Kylie Ohlmiller
Every so often, one publication or another will compile a list of the greatest athletes to ever wear a certain uniform number. Some are easy than others. For instance, with apologies to Aaron Judge, No. 99 belongs to Wayne Gretzky.
Number 17 is a little harder. Some say it’s Boston Celtics Hall of Famer John Havlicek. Others consider it Finnish hockey legend Jari Kurri. Or Dizzy Dean, ace of the St. Louis Cardinals’ famed Gashouse Gang.
But what about Kylie Ohlmiller?
After all, Ohlmiller, who wears No. 17 for Stony Brook women’s lacrosse, didn’t just have the best statistical season of her career in 2017. She had the best statistical season of anyone’s career in 2017.
A Tewaaraton finalist, Ohlmiller broke the NCAA Division I single-season record with 164 points, surpassing the great Jen Adams, and also eclipsed Hannah Nielsen for the single-season assists mark with 86.
Ohlmiller won the America East Rookie of the Year in 2015. In 2016, she made the U.S. national team and fulfilled the prophecy from her high school yearbook when her behind-the-back virtuosity landed her on “SportsCenter,” twice.
In retrospect, she probably should have seen 2017 coming. No. 17 means something in the Ohlmiller household. Kylie has worn it her whole life. Her dad, Chuck, wore it as a high school baseball player. His dad wore it before him.
“I’ve actually thought about it,” she said. “Like, ‘Wow, 2017 has been a good year.’”
— Mark Macyk
Best Game
And the winner is...
England 10, Australia 9 (OT) — FIL Women's World Cup Bronze Medal Game
England rallied from a four-goal second-half deficit and Megan Whittle (Maryland ’18) scored on a free position with 5.5 seconds remaining in double overtime to defeat Australia 10-9 in the bronze medal game of the FIL Women’s World Cup at Surrey Sports Park in Guildford, England.
England, the host country, medaled in the event for the first time since 2005, while Australia dropped to fourth place, falling short of a medal for the first time in its history.
Tewaaraton finalist Olivia Hompe (Princeton ’17) provided the heroics in regulation, scoring three goals in the final 10 minutes and tying the game on a backhanded shovel shot with her back to the goal with 2:22 remaining.
“To play for this team and this country in front of this crowd, it’s really a dream come true,” Hompe said. “This was the game of the whole tournament.”
— Matt DaSilva