PETERBOROUGH, Ontario — Much has been made about the experience of this year’s U.S. women’s U19 team. For the first time, the U.S. has allowed players with previous college experience to be a part of the U19 team.
There’s no question the move has paid big dividends all over the field as the U.S. has rolled through to the semifinals, outscoring its opponents 94-11 in five victories.
Northwestern All-American Izzy Scane has been a dominant force on offense. Duke’s Maddie Jenner has ruled the draw and the defense, anchored by Vanderbilt’s Bri Gross, Massachusetts’ Ally Murphy and North Carolina’s Brooklyn Neumen has played lockdown in front of collegiate goaltenders Madison Doucette (Northwestern) and Rachel Hall, who led the nation in saves at Oregon before transferring to Boston College. The goaltending tandem has identical 75.0 save percentages to tie for the lead of all goalies in the tournament.
But don’t forget about the young guns. Plenty of players with no college experience have been major contributors to the team, including three players who still have their senior year of high school ahead of them.
Entering tonight’s semifinal game against Australia (5 p.m. with streaming on Lax Sports Network and the Olympic Channel), rising high school seniors Leah Holmes (Hackley School - N.Y.), Belle Smith (Westhampton Beach - N.Y.) and Caitlyn Wurzburger (American Heritage – Fla.) are among the top four scorers on the team.
Wurzburger is the team’s leading scorer with 31 points and her 15 assists leads the more than 400 players competing in the tournament.
Holmes is second with 20 points (12g, 8a), highlighted by a nine-point performance in a 25-0 opening round playoff win over Hong Kong that was the highest single-game total for a U.S. U19 player since 2007.
Smith’s 14 goals is the second-highest total on the team, trailing only Wurzburger’s 16 goals.