Vanderbilt’s second-half outburst against Elon continued a season-long trend of strong performances in the final 30 minutes. The Commodores outscored Liberty 7-4 in the second half of their season opener to secure an 18-13 victory. Against Notre Dame, Vanderbilt staged a second-half comeback, scoring eight goals to narrowly win 14-12. This determination during the final 30 minutes is a welcome change from years past, Gross said.
“In the second half, in years previously, we haven’t been able to flip that switch and we’ll let teams hang with us a little longer,” Gross said. “But this year, the team has a different mentality of a bit more confidence. We know we’re better than these teams and we can put them away and should put them away.”
These second-half drives have been powered by a deep, well-rounded roster. The Commodores currently have 38 players, a larger number than usual because of some players taking graduate years. Thirty-one athletes took the field against Elon. Gross said bringing in talented players off the bench has been an important component of Vanderbilt’s success, allowing them to utilize fresh players while their opponents grow tired.
This depth has sometimes made things hard on the coaching staff, who must figure out who their “hot hand” is each game, Hewitt said. But the larger, more balanced roster has been especially coachable and excels at executing, which Hewitt said has been key to their success.
“On any given day, anyone can step up,” Hewitt said. “That’s hard for players that have been with us for four years and have spent 60 minutes on the field that [now] might be seeing 40 minutes of playing time, but it gives one of their teammates an opportunity to get on the field and make an impact. Every day in practice the competition level is so high because everybody’s getting an opportunity to get their shot.”
NUMBERS OF NOTE
10
No. 4 Maryland kicked off a home stand in College Park on Saturday, easily dismantling No. 11 Florida 18-8. Graduate attacker Aurora Cordingley looked comfortable as ever during her first home game as Terrapin, notching a career-high 10 points. This marks the first time since March 2013 that a Maryland player has recorded 10 points in one game.
15
No. 13 Virginia powered past then-No. 16 Stanford over the weekend to record a dominant 23-13 victory in Charlottesville. Key to the Cavaliers’ success was sophomore midfielder Aubrey Williams’ masterful performance on the draw. Williams notched 15 draw controls — a new single-game record for Virginia — to propel her team to victory.
7
No. 5 Northwestern and No. 3 Syracuse put on quite the show Tuesday, going back and forth all game. Wildcats senior attacker Lauren Gilbert matched her career-high with seven goals — including the game-winning free position in overtime — to propel Northwestern to a 16-15 victory in Evanston.
2014
Vermont kicked off its home slate against Wagner on Sunday, scoring seven unanswered goals spanning more than 30 minutes to win 10-6. Junior midfielder Ava Vasile played a key role in the matchup, tallying four goals for the Catamounts. The victory marks Vermont’s first win in a home opener since 2014.