Bitter as it was, that loss helped motivate the Terps throughout the 1985 campaign. Maryland opened the season with another loss to its nemesis, losing on the road at Temple, before reeling off 15 straight wins.
“We had a core group that next season that would come to practice early, or stay late, to put in extra work,” Trudel Martellucci recalled. “We were so motivated to have the senior year that we wanted. It consumed us.”
The work paid off as the Terps returned to the final four again. Playing at home, Maryland defeated Penn State 12-11 in overtime in the national semifinal to punch its ticket to the NCAA final at Philadelphia’s historic Franklin Field, a short drive from Trudel’s hometown of Wayne, Pa.
In the championship game against the upstart New Hampshire Wildcats, a heartbreaking 6-5 loss left the Terps just short, once again, from claiming the ultimate prize. The high-powered offense had been held to its lowest goal total of the season.
Trudel Martellucci finished with 48 goals and 70 points that senior season, but dishearteningly, she walked off the field for the final time in her All-American career as the national runner-up, the third time in four seasons.
“That was completely frustrating,” she said. “We just weren’t ready for the defense they had. We still talk about it.”
Ironically, the Terps bookended Trudel Martellucci’s career with national championships, although the two-time team captain missed by one year on each end. Maryland captured the penultimate AIAW championship in 1981, the spring before she arrived in College Park, and then claimed its first NCAA title in 1986, the season after she departed.
Trudel Martellucci’s significant accomplishments during a career in which she came agonizingly close to winning multiple national championships did not go unnoticed. She graduated as No. 2 in career goals (135) and points (185) at Maryland and became just the third player in program history to reach the 100-goal milestone. She was named to the ACC’s 50th Anniversary Women’s Lacrosse Team in 2002, and two years ago, she received her school’s highest individual honor, induction into the University of Maryland Athletics Hall of Fame.
Today, Trudel Martellucci, 57, serves as chief operating officer of GMI Insurance, a family business founded by her father, Norman, in 1980. She draws on some of the same skills and abilities she developed as a lacrosse player to help guide her in the business world.
“One thing I think I took away from my experience at Maryland was learning how to be a leader,” she said. “Being the captain of two teams gave me great experience for being an owner and a boss for running and managing my company.”
Trudel Martellucci has also remained connected to the sport she loves for much of the time since her magazine cover experience. In addition to serving a two-year term as a board member for the US Lacrosse Foundation, she was both a high school and middle school coach in and around her hometown of Valley Forge, Pa., as well as a longtime travel team coach with the Phantastix Club program.
No longer coaching, she and her husband of 32 years, Tom, have now transitioned into becoming primarily lacrosse parents who follow the exploits of their youngest son, Jake, a senior lacrosse player at his mom’s alma mater, Maryland.
“I still have wonderful memories, and looking back, I’m proud of what I accomplished,” she said. “We were one of the best teams. I loved every minute.”