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Boston College is playing under the lights, but shooting them down.
Of the eight seeded teams in this year’s tournament, two hailed from the ACC – No. 2 North Carolina and No. 6 Syracuse. Of the conference’s eight teams, all but two went dancing.
The one still standing is the team fans least expected – Boston College, which earned the fifth seed in the league tournament behind the No. 1 Tar Heels, No. 2 Orange, No. 3 Virginia and No. 4 Notre Dame.
“Friday night under the lights, if they feel nervous, they can quickly shoot it down because they’ve worked hard for the moment,” said Boston College coach Acacia Walker. “To be the only ACC team is amazing. … All the other ACC teams are amazing teams and I’m surprised that they’re not there, but they have helped prepare us.”
Walker, who played for Timchal at Maryland and grew up down the street from the Naval Academy, will be well prepared for what her opponent might throw at the Eagles, but will have to take her own advice of pushing the nerves aside.
“I never underestimate Cindy,” Walker said. “The woman knows how to win. … Cindy being at the helm of that program will make anyone nervous.”
Navy is the Cinderella story, but isn’t acting like one.
“I don’t think we feel that way, but I guess it looks like that,” Timchal said, laughing. “I’m really proud of the team.”
While Boston College is also unranked, Navy is taking the headlines. First, as the No. 2 seed in the Patriot League tournament, the Mids rolled past Loyola unexpectedly to claim its first conference crown since the Greyhounds joined the conference in 2014 and the automatic qualifying bid to the NCAA tournament.
Navy continued its unlikely run by upsetting No. 7 seed Penn in the first round, followed by wins over UMass and North Carolina.
“They bought into the idea of transcending,” Timchal said following the historic win over the Tar Heels.
Timchal, who is the NCAA’s all-time leader in career wins and has eight NCAA titles under her belt as the former head coach at Maryland, knows what it takes to get in the tournament – and stay in the tournament. The key is keeping everything in perspective and simply focusing on themselves.
Strengths
Boston College's draw game is now dangerous(ly good).
It’s easy to identify the leading scorers, and while Walker may point out her defense as a key strength this season because the offense can’t get the ball unless the defense does its job, the Eagles’ performance on the draw has been a key staple for them, especially in the postseason.
In the first round, they edged out Canisius 16-15 on the draw for the 21-9 win. In the second round, Boston College led in every statistical team category against Syracuse with a 17-15 advantage in draw controls.
Then against USC, the Eagles improved exponentially, taking the midfield 23-12. It’s been a much-needed change since Boston College last played Navy – the Mids won the draw battle 19-14.
This season, Eagles sophomore Sam Apuzzo leads the team with 59 draw controls, but it’s been a complete team effort in the NCAA tournament.
Against Canisius, Apuzzo kicked it off with a team-high six draw controls. Against Syracuse, freshman Sheila Reitano led with eight draw controls. Against USC, it was senior Kate Weeks who led the way with seven draw controls.
Walker’s immediate response when asked what the difference will be between winning and losing on Friday?
“We have to win the draws,” she said. "Our kids really battle hard in the 50-50 battles, which I think may be something that will trigger some inspiration for Friday.”
Aly Messinger is on Navy's side.
Navy has turned the corner, much in part thanks to assistant Aly Messinger.
This season, Timchal welcomed last year’s NCAA championship Most Outstanding Player Aly Messinger, who graduated from North Carolina with 230 points as a three-time All-American and two-time All-ACC honoree with two national titles to boot (2013, 2016).
Under Messinger’s guidance with championship-caliber experience, Navy’s offensive players have etched their names in the record books.
On April 3, freshman attacker Kelly Larkin earned a record-breaking sixth Patriot League Rookie of the Week honor with 14 points in wins over Lehigh and Army. On April 29, the team tied the school record for goals scored in a game in its 24-10 victory at Lafayette, which was also the first time the Mids scored 24 goals on the road.
For single-season records, Jenna Collins now sits second with 111 points, tied with Erin Rawlick who tallied the same mark in 2010, and is 16 points away from ranking first. Collins is also six goals away from tying Rawlick’s 77-goal record.
“The offense has really bought into sharing the ball, playing as a unit and really knowing what it’s going to take to be successful,” Timchal said. “It’s been on the players to make the right decision at the right time.”
The Mids have seven players who are in the double digits for scoring.
Weaknesses
Can Boston College be the ACC-caliber team that fans are used to seeing in the final four?
The bottom line for Walker is Boston College has to stay consistent in its play and not being rattled by different strategies thrown its way.
During the regular season, the Eagles lost to Syracuse 18-8, Virginia Tech 18-12, Maryland 21-13, North Carolina 15-13 and Duke 15-12. In the ACC tournament, they fell to the Tar Heels again, 17-14.
But the NCAA tournament has shone some light on a Boston College team that might be keeping that consistency that’s required of an NCAA champion. The Eagles rebounded against Syracuse and scored 20 or more goals in all three games. The last time they scored 20 goals was back in March, ironically against Navy.
“I just hope to get them a little bit better and a little more confident this week,” Walker said. “We can’t be the same team we’ve been all year. We have to be better than we’ve ever been. It’s the final four.”
Can Navy play like Maryland?
As the former head coach at Maryland for 16 seasons from 1991-2006, featuring eight NCAA titles, Timchal is no stranger to the final four. But it’s the first time the Mids have danced this far since the program’s inception, first as a club in 2007 and then as a Division I team in 2008.
Navy has recorded winning seasons each year, but it has yet to reach the caliber of the Maryland dynasty. This year, Navy now has its chance to break the mold, but Timchal still wonders if Navy can reach the level of excellence Maryland has historically achieved year after year.
Upon being asked about areas of improvement and what her team needs to do in order to succeed in the final four, Timchal’s response was simple:
“Play like Maryland?” she questioned, laughing.
Fans will have to wait and see if this is finally Navy’s year to break through.