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5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 29
2003 SEASON REVIEW • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
2003 Season RecapThe 2003 season symbolized what could only be characterized as a return for the
University of Maryland women’s lacrosse team. A return to the top of the Atlantic Coast
Conference. At one point, a return to the top of the national rankings. A return to the
Final Four. And ultimately, a return to the tradition that is Maryland lacrosse.
The 2003 season started with Maryland ranked sixth in the national polls and many
pundits believing that ranking was too high. After a season-opening 20-5 win over No.
20 George Mason, the number of doubters began to dwindle. Those who were left
would get all the answers they needed the following week.
As it had almost every other season, Maryland had two of its
toughest tests early in the form of North Carolina and Duke.
Still a young team, the Terrapins had their work cut out for
them against long-time nemesis UNC, but when senior Sonia
Judd found the net with 12:29 remaining in the second half
against the 10th-ranked Tar Heels, the Terps sealed their first
win of the ACC season and awaited second-ranked Duke.
Against the Blue Devils, the Terps came out seeming a
bit nervous and fell behind, 3-1. After rattling off three-straight
goals, Duke answered with three of its own before Kelly
Coppedge scored with just over four minutes left in the half to
cut the halftime deficit to one (6-5). The second half was all Mary-
land with three straight goals going the Terrapins’ way before
Cheryl Lynn Horton and Maryland native Katie Chrest tied the game
at eight. What happened in overtime was one of the stories of the
year for the Terps.
Senior Alexis Venechanos, who spent three years working to live
up to the expectations of a Terp netminder, came up huge for the Terra-
pins, making two big saves in what was a 12-save day. Sophomore Acacia
Walker scored at the 1:51 mark of the first overtime frame to give Mary-
land the lead, and Venechanos shut the door the rest of the way. It would
be the start of a confidence boost for Venechanos that would lead her to
the best season of her career and one of the best in Terrapin lore.
A year after starting 0-2 against the Carolina schools, Maryland now
found itself 2-0. Another overtime win, this time against Syracuse, got
the team started on a roll that would ultimately see it win its first 11
games. But in that 11th game, the Terps got their first taste of adver-
sity – Venechanos went down with a knee injury.
The injury took place in the first half and Maryland –
now the nation’s No. 1 team’– found itself down 8-5 on
the road and without its standout netminder. In what
was somewhat of a microcosm of the season, fel-
low senior Cara Gorman stepped up, made
10 second half saves, and the Terrapins ral-
lied to outscore Georgetown 8-2 in the sec-
ond frame and win, 13-10.
A game later, the Terrapins would suf-
fer their first defeat of the year, but would go
on to win the next two, all with Gorman in the net. The team now had one game to
prepare for the ACC Tournament and it did so with Venechanos in net and playing on a
knee that would require surgery after the season.
When the tournament rolled around in Charlottesville, Va., the team found itself
with the conference’s player of the year’– Kelly Coppedge – and serving as the tourney’s
top seed. It responded in kind, thumping No. 14 North Carolina, 13-5, and then han-
dling host Virginia for the second time in the season on its home turf, 11-6. Senior Sonia
Judd and Julie Shank were joined by juniors Coppedge and Annie Collins on the all-
tournament team, while Venechanos was named tournament MVP with her 24 saves in
two games.
With three games now left in the regular season, Maryland had one goal in mind –
prepare for the NCAA tournament. Things started off well enough with an 18-1 win in
the slush over Virginia Tech, but then it got a little rougher. Eventual NCAA champ
Princeton handed Maryland a 13-6 defeat, the only game all season that the team looked
out of its element. One reason for the letdown was likely an emotional, highly-antici-
pated matchup later in the week with No. 1 Loyola, a team which was playing for a coach,
Diane Geppi-Aikens, who was fighting what would months later be a losing battle with
cancer. What would result would be what was likely the game of the year in collegiate
women’s lacrosse.
In front of a bi-partisan crowd and nearly every television camera in town, the
Terrapins fell behind early, 3-0. The one-versus-two matchup then got a lot more inter-
esting as Maryland ran off four-straight goals to take the lead. When the Greyhounds
answered with just under four minutes left in the first half, a tie at the half looked inevi-
table but Judd was fouled after taking the ball to goal and then converted with three
seconds left to give the Terps the lead.
Maryland’s strong play continued at the start of the
second half as Coppedge, Collins and Jessica Dorney
each scored to give the home team a three-goal ad-
vantage with 20 minutes remaining. Loyola, how-
ever, would score four goals in the game’s final 12
minutes – three of them unassisted efforts by se-
nior Suzanne Eyler – with the final tally breaking
the Terrapins’ back with :26 remaining.
With the tournament now staring them
in the face, the Terps – a juggernaut all season––
now had questions to answer. The first response
came in resounding fashion, a NCAA tournament
record 26 goals in a 26-6 win over Temple. The
next step would put the team in the Final Four.
Poor conditions at Ludwig Field sent
what was scheduled to be a home game over
to Loyola for the team’s game against
Dartmouth. After a 2-2 start, freshman Delia
Cox and Coppedge teamed up to do the Big
Green in. Cox posted a hat trick, consistently
beating her defenders all day. Coppedge scored
a game-high four goals, added an assist while
Maryland scored the game’s final seven goals.
Syracuse’s Carrier Dome was the site of
the Terps’ return to the Final Four and the op-
ponent was rival Virginia. The Terrapins felt con-
fident following two decisive wins over the Cava-
liers in the regular season, but surprisingly came
out skittish. Virginia took advantage of Mary-
land mistakes and took a 4-2 lead into the locker
room.
The second half was a completely dif-
ferent story. The Terps ran their trademark
transition offense to perfection and rattled
off four-straight goals to start the frame. Vir-
ginia answered back with two but then Judd
came up big with a pair of goals, doing so in front of her family who was in from Australia
for the final games of her outstanding career. With less than seven minutes remaining, it
appeared the Terrapins would return to their old stomping grounds, the national finals.
That return, however, never came. The Cavaliers scored three goals in the game’s
final 4:14, the last a Cary Chasney unassisted tally with 1:33 left, and the Terps season
ended at 18-4 and a young team’s collective heart broken.
Numerous Terrapins were lauded for their efforts in 2003. Among them: Kelly
Coppedge (Tewaaraton Finalist, first team All-American, ACC Player of the Year, National
Midfielder of the Year); Alexis Venechanos (National Goalkeeper of the Year); Julie Shank
(Division I Scholar-Athlete of the Year); Cindy Timchal (ACC Coach of the Year); Sonia
Judd (IWLCA first team All-American); Acacia Walker (IWLCA third team All-American);
and Delia Cox (Warrior/Inside Lacrosse Rookie of the Year) to name a few.
In the end, the ’03 season was just what the Terrapin program needed. It showed
the lacrosse world that the dynasty is far from being an afterthought and with the return
of key player in ’04, that fact is sure to be reiterated.
National Goalkeeper of the YearAlexis Venechanos
30 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • 2003 SEASON REVIEW
2003 Season ResultsDate Opponent (Rnk.) W/L Score Rec. �Goals-Assists SavesF Att.2-25 G. MASON (6/20) W 20-5 1-0 Coppedge 5-2, Walker 3-3, Judd 2-3, Collins 4-0, Cox 2-1, Leggio 2-1, Dorney 1-0, Venechanos 6 68
Warren, 1-0, Motley 0-1, Shank 0-1
3-2 NO. CAROLINA* (6/10) W 10-8 2-0 Judd 5-3, Coppedge 2-2, Walker 1-1, Collins 1-0, Leggio 1-0 Venechanos 9 1479
3-6 DUKE* (4/2) W 9-8 (OT) 3-0 Walker 3-2, Coppedge 4-0, Cox 1-0, Judd 1-0 Venechanos 12 432
3-8 SYRACUSE (4/7) W 8-7 (OT) 4-0 Cox 2-1, Judd 1-2, Coppedge 2-0, Collins 1-1, Dorney 1-0, Leggio 1-0 Venechanos 6 826
3-11 Virginia* (3/8) W 11-8 5-0 Coppedge 5-0, Dorney 3-1, Walker 0-3, Richards 1-1, Collins 0-2, Cox 1-0, Venechanos 10 325
Sommers 1-0, Judd 0-1
3-15 BROWN (3/—) W 15-5 6-0 Judd 3-2, Dorney 3-0, Coppedge 2-1, Leggio 2-1, Walker 2-1, Cox 2-0, Venechanos 6 445
Shank 1-0, Richards 0-1
3-18 Dartmouth (2/10) W 9-2 7-0 Judd 2-2, Cox 3-0, Coppedge 1-2, Walker 2-0, Leggio 1-0, Shank 0-1 Venechanos 12 200
3-22 Old Dominion (2/16) W 16-5 8-0 Coppedge 3-3, Walker 3-1, Cox 3-0, Dorney 2-1, Judd 2-0, Leggio 1-1, Venechanos 6 250
Sommers 1-1, Lambert 1-0
3-28 vs. Penn State1 (2/11) W 11-10 9-0 Coppedge 3-2, Judd 3-1, Dorney 2-0, Collins 1-1, Walker 1-1, Warren 1-0 Venechanos 12 426
3-30 Ohio State! (2/16) W 10-5 10-0 Judd 2-1, Walker 2-1, Leggio 1-2, Coppedge 2-0, Collins 1-0, Dorney 1-0, Warren 1-0 Venechanos 9 406
4-2 Georgetown (1/6) W 13-10 11-0 Cox 4-0, Coppedge 3-1, Collins 2-0, Dorney 2-0, Warren 1-1, Leggio 1-1, Walker 0-2 Gorman 10 608
Venechanos 4
4-5 JMS. MADISON (1/12) L 8-9 11-1 Coppedge 1-2, Cox 2-0, Judd 2-0, Leggio 2-0, Walker 1-0 Gorman 8 368
4-8 WM. & MARY (2/—) W 21-6 12-1 Judd 7-2, Coppedge 6-0, Walker 1-4, Leggio 3-1, Collins 2-1, Mallon 0-2, Dorney 1-0 Miles 5 95
McLeod 1-0, Shank 0-1
4-12 J. HOPKINS (2/19) W 19-4 13-1 Coppedge 7-0, Judd 3-2, Leggio 1-3, Walker 1-3, Collins 3-0, Cox 3-0, Dorney 1-0, Warren 0-1 Venechanos 5 720
4-18 vs. N. Carolina2 (2/14) W 13-5 14-1 Coppedge 4-1, Judd 4-1, Cox 2-1, Walker 1-0, Dorney 1-0, Collins 1-0 Venechanos 11 2330
4-20 vs. Virginia3 (2/4) W 11-6 15-1 Walker 2-3, Collins 3-1, Coppedge 2-1, Judd 1-2, Leggio 2-0, Dorney 1-0 Venechanos 13 3355
4-26 VIRGINIA TECH (2/—) W 18-1 16-1 Coppedge 5-1, Cox 3-0, Collins 2-1, Jaissle 0-3, Leggio 0-3, Judd 2-0, Lambert 2-0 Venechanos 1 612
Dorney 1-1, Walker 0-2, Reid 1-0, Richards 1-0, Warren 1-0 Miles 2
4-30 PRINCETON (2/6) L 6-13 16-2 Coppedge 3-0, Collins 1-0, Cox 1-0, Dorney 1-0, Shank 0-1, Walker 0-1 Venechanos 7 470
5-3 LOYOLA (2/1) L 8-9 16-3 Coppedge 3-0, Judd 1-2, Cox 2-0, Collins 1-1, Dorney 1-0, Leggio 0-1 Venechanos 12 962
5-8 TEMPLE4 (2/—) W 26-6 17-3 Dorney 5-1, Coppedge 4-1, Walker 3-2, Judd 3-1, Cox 2-2, Collins 1-3, Leggio 2-1 Venechanos 5 249
Richards 2-1, Lambert 1-2, Warren 1-1, McLeod 1-0, Sommers 1-0, Shank 0-1 Gorman 1
5-11 DARTMOUTH5 (2/6) W 13-5 18-3 Coppedge 4-1, Cox 3-0, Judd 2-1, Walker 2-1, Leggio 1-2, Warren 1-0 Venechanos 9 389
5-16 vs. Virginia6 (2/3) L 8-9 18-4 Venechanos 8 1440
Key: * = ACC game Total Att: 16455
1 = ACC/ALC Challenge; Columbus, Ohio Home 7115
2 = ACC Semifinals; Charlottesville, Va. Away 1789
3 = ACC Finals; Charlottesville, Va. Neutral 7551
4 = NCAA First Round; College Park, Md.
5 = NCAA Quarterfinals; College Park, Md.
6 = NCAA Semifinals; Syracuse, N.Y.
Sonia Judd Julie Shank
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 31
2003 SEASON REVIEW • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
2003 Season StatisticsNo. Name � GP GS Goals Assts Pts Shots FPS GWG Pts/G Sh. % GB CT T DC F C Goals Assts Pts
18 Coppedge, Kelly 22 22 73 22 95 141 13 7 4.32 0.518 52 31 42 37 31 5 147 55 202
5 Judd, Sonia 22 22 49 25 74 97 16 4 3.36 0.505 41 16 33 36 41 1 111 55 166
13 Walker, Acacia 22 22 29 33 62 76 8 2 2.82 0.382 34 22 34 42 31 4 48 47 95
2 Cox, Delia 22 22 36 6 42 81 12 1 1.91 0.444 71 17 32 35 36 5 36 6 42
22 Leggio, Kristie 21 21 22 16 38 57 5 0 1.81 0.386 44 6 39 29 11 2 48 30 78
11 Collins, Annie 21 21 24 11 35 57 14 2 1.67 0.421 31 18 21 16 18 1 48 16 64
12 Dorney, Jessica 22 22 28 5 33 58 5 1 1.50 0.483 28 5 27 17 11 1 30 6 36
8 Warren, Laura 22 22 7 4 11 9 0 1 0.50 0.778 40 18 8 15 12 2 9 5 14
20 Richards, Brooke 18 2 4 3 7 12 1 0 0.39 0.333 13 1 2 7 0 0 4 3 7
21 Lambert, Molly 22 22 4 2 6 8 2 0 0.27 0.500 24 11 20 10 45 7 10 5 15
4 Shank, Julie 22 22 1 5 6 4 0 0 0.27 0.250 48 27 17 22 23 2 10 9 19
9 Sommers, Greta 22 22 3 1 4 5 1 0 0.18 0.600 27 20 8 9 12 0 6 1 7
7 Jaissle, Emily 7 0 0 3 3 1 0 0 0.43 0.000 3 2 1 1 2 0 0 3 3
31 Mallon, Meg 21 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0.10 0.000 14 8 2 1 5 0 0 2 2
16 McLeod, Tess 18 0 2 0 2 2 1 0 0.11 1.000 5 7 3 5 4 0 2 0 2
26 Reid, Lauren 4 0 1 0 1 2 1 0 0.25 0.500 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
23 Motley, Jaimee 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0.50 0.000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
32 Venechanos, Alexis 20 20 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.000 40 10 12 0 1 0 0 0 0
10 Sommar, Megan 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.000 6 2 1 1 4 0 0 0 0
3 O’Brien, Meredith 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.000 2 5 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
30 Miles, Kirah 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.000 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
39 Gorman, Cara 8 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.000 3 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0
6 Marmion, Jenny 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.000 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0
25 Clinton, Emily 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
35 Valentine, Lisa 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.000 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
14 Howley, Annie 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0.00 0.000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1 Reinhardt, Carrie 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Maryland Totals 22 22 283 139 422 611 79 18 19.18 0.463 533 227 311 283 288 30Opp. Totals 22 22 145 47 192 401 84 4 8.73 0.362 499 177 333 202 269 29
No. Name � GP GS � Svs. GA � Min.* � GAA Sv. % � Win Loss
32 Venechanos, Alexis 20 20 164 121 1096.6 6.62 0.575 16 3
39 Gorman, Cara 8 2 20 16 123.5 7.77 0.556 1 1
30 Miles, Kirah 8 0 9 7 103.6 4.05 0.563 1 0
Maryland Totals F 22 22 193 144 1320.3 6.54 0.573 18 4
Opp. Totals 22 22 232 283 1320.3 12.86 0.450 4 18
*The Virginia Tech game was called due to poor field conditions at the 50:22 mark, making goalie minutes end in a fraction
The 2003 Terrapins
32 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • 2003 SEASON REVIEW
2003 Game Recaps
COLLEGE PARK, Md. – Maryland continued its strong early season
play, handing No. 10 North Carolina a 10-8 defeat at the UM Artifi-
cial Turf Facility. The victory was the Terrapins’ first regular-season
Atlantic Coast Conference win since 2001 and moved the team to 2-
0 overall (1-0 ACC).
As it had in its season opener against George Mason, No. 6 Mary-
land jumped on the Tar Heels quickly, staking itself a 5-0 lead in the
game’s first 10 minutes. Junior All-American’Kelly Coppedge led
the way early scoring a pair of goals and assisting on another.
The Tar Heels (1-1, 0-1 ACC), however, would not let the game
get too out of hand as they chipped away, scoring the final three
goals of the first half and cutting the Terps’ halftime lead to 5-3.
The start of the second half was similar to the first with Mary-
land taking the early advantage with three unanswered goals. In
that stretch, Sonia Juddshowed scored a pair of goals and assisted on the other. It was the
start of what would ultimately end in a career game for the senior
from Darlington, South Australia.
Carolina would answer the Terp run with a pair of goals of its
own, cutting the lead back to 8-5, but Judd would again go on the
attack to extend the Terp lead. At the 45:02 mark, Judd was able to
find the net after a strong run in from the eight meter and minutes
later, she converted a free position attempt to post her career-high
tying fifth goal and move the Maryland lead back to five.
UNC would again run off three goals to cut the lead to two, but
that would be as close as the Tar Heels would get as the Terrapins
would successfully defend its goal and run out the clock. Senior
Alexis Venechanos was key to the defensive effort, making nine
saves with six coming in an outstanding first half.
Judd led all scorers with a career-high eight points (five points,
three assists) and was super efficient, converting her five goals on
just seven shots. Coppedge added two goals and a pair of assists
while sophomore Acacia Walker added a goal and an assist.
Box Score#10 NO. CAROLINA 3 5 — 8#6 MARYLAND 5 5 — 10INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Judd 5-3—8, Coppedge 2-2—4, Walker 1-1—2, Collins 1-0—1,Leggio 1-0—1. UNC: McCarthy 0-3—3, Higgins 2-0—2, Ames 2-0—2,Young 0-2—2, Allen 1-0—1, Barnes 1-0—1, Dieringer 1-0—1, Fortino1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 9-8-60:00; UNC: M. Garafalo, 7-10-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland UNCShots 10-11—21 9-11—20Saves 6-3—9 5-2—7Draw Controls 5-6—11 4-4—8Groundballs 8-10—18 6-10—16Turnovers 10-7—17 5-8—13Caused Turnovers 7-6—13 7-6—13Free Position Shots 1-1—2 6-3—9Fouls 14-11—25 5-4—9A-1,479
COLLEGE PARK, Md. – The Terps kept their 2003 turnaround in-
tact as they handed second-ranked Duke a 9-8 overtime loss at the
UM Artificial Turf Facility. The Terrapins — who started last season
1-2 and 0-2 in the ACC — handed Duke (3-1, 0-1 ACC) their first loss
of the season while moving to 3-0 overall.
In the win, the fourth-ranked Terps overcame a first half that
saw them playing from behind to a Duke team that seemed to be in
control before ultimately moving on and playing a strong second
half and overtime period. In that first half, Duke opened the game
with a pair of goals by Katie Chrest before the teams would trade
single goals en route to an early 3-1 Blue Devil lead. It was the first
time this season that the Terps did not open the game with a scor-
ing burst and was, in fact, the first time Maryland had trailed this
season.
The Terrapins, however, would run off the game’s next three
goals to take the lead with sophomore Acacia Walker netting a
pair in the mini-run. Duke would answer with three of its own be-
fore junior Kelly Coppedge scored at the 25:49 mark, the final
goal of the first half, cutting the Duke advantage to 6-5. Duke outshot
the Terrapins 18-9 in the frame but four of its six first-half goals
came on free position shots.
The second half began with a totally different feel with Maryland
controlling the draws and play. The Terrapins ran off four unanswered
goals in the half’s first seven minutes with three coming from
Coppedge. Duke’s Cheryl Lynn Horton answered with a goal of her
own at the 46:07 mark and neither team scored for the next 19-plus
minutes as the Terrapins held on to a 8-7 lead.
With 4:49 left in regulation, it was Maryland native Katie Chrest
again, taking a feed from Katie Laschinger to tie the score. Both
teams would have their chances in the game’s final minutes but
neither could convert and the game went to overtime.
In the first overtime frame, it was Walker again for Maryland,
finishing on a run in from the eight-meter to give the Terps the lead
with 1:51 remaining in that first extra frame. Less than a minute
later, the Blue Devils had their best chance at tying the game as
Chrest was awarded a free position shot, but senior goalie AlexisVenechanos came up with her first of two huge overtime stops.
The teams would switch sides and Maryland successfully held the
ball away from the Blue Devils for much of the period with
Venechanos again making a huge save on the loan Duke shot, this
time stopping Lauren Gallagher’s attempt with 1:11 remaining.
Box Score#2 DUKE 6 2 0 0 — 8#4 MARYLAND 5 3 1 0 — 9INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Walker 3-2—5, Coppedge 4-0—4, Cox 1-0—1, Judd 1-0—1. DU:Chrest 3-0—3, Gallagher 1-2—3, Miller 1-1—2, Laschinger 0-2—2,Bennett 1-0—1, Dirks 1-0—1, Horton 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 12-8-66:00; DU: M. Huether, 6-9-66:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland DukeShots 9-10-1—20 18-9-2—29Saves 7-3-2—12 1-5-0—6Draw Controls 6-5-3—14 6-1-0—7Groundballs 11-11-0—22 15-12-2—29Turnovers 12-6-4—20 5-6-3—14Caused Turnovers 3-5-1—9 8-2-2—12Free Position Shots 1-0-1—1 4-0-1—5Fouls 11-8-4—23 4-8-3—15A-432
COLLEGE PARK, Md. – Maryland opened its 2003 campaign look-
ing like one of the Maryland teams of old, mixing a quick-strike of-
fense with a strong defense in an impressive 20-5 win over No. 20
George Mason at the UM Artificial Turf Facility.
The No. 6 Terrapins (1-0) are now 23-7 in season openers and
today’s win was in the bag early. Maryland scored nine unanswered
goals in the contest’s first 12:24 with All-American Kelly Coppedgefinding the net three times in the game’s first five-and-a-half min-
utes. The Terrapins’ nine goal run — which ended on freshman
Delia Cox’s first career goal — came on just 10 shots.
Scoring would slow for the Terps and GMU actually scored four
of the game’s next six goals to cut the deficit to seven (11-4), but
Maryland would go on the attack again to pull away for good.
Sophomore’Annie Collins paced a second-half run with three goals
and the Terps would again run off nine-in-a-row before the Patriots
scored in the game’s final minute to leave the final at 20-5.
Senior netminder’Alexis Venechanos was solid in the cage,
making six saves while allowing just four goals. The Terrapin de-
fense also gets credit in the strong performance as it held George
Mason to just nine shots and only three in the second half, despite
the Patriots’ need to get back in the game.
In the win, the Terrapins outshot GMU, 41-9, and won the draw
control battle, 16-11. In 21 games last season, Maryland hit the 40-
shot mark just twice and the 20-goal mark just once while it achieved
both today and did so with amazing efficiency (.488 team shooting
percentage).
Maryland put 10 players in the scoring column with Coppedge
leading all scorers with a career-high tying seven points while also
tying a career best with five goals. Sophomore Acacia Walker was
active all game and added her third career hat trick to go along with
three assists. Senior Sonia Judd had five points (two goals, three
assists) while Collins finished the game with four goals. Judd was also
strong on the draw in the second half, coming away with four draw
controls and leading the Terps to a 9-5 second-half advantage in that
area.
Stacy Berger and Lisa Hagan each led George Mason (0-1) in
scoring with a goal and an assist apiece.
Box Score#20 GEORGE MASON 2 3 — 5#6 MARYLAND 10 10 — 20INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 5-2—7, Walker 3-3—6, Judd 2-3—5, Collins 4-0—4, Cox2-1—3, Leggio 2-1—3, Dorney 1-0—1, Warren 1-0—1, Motley 0-1—1,Shank 0-1—1.GMU: Berger 1-1—2, Hagan 1-1—2, Toomey 1-0—1, Manas 1-0—1,Evans 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 6-4-56:03, K. Miles 0-1-3:57; GMU: M. Dentler, 1-9-12:24, C. Whittenberg, 17-11-47:36.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland George MasonShots 18-23—41 6-3—9Saves 5-1—6 8-12—20Draw Controls 7-9—16 6-5—11Groundballs 14-14—28 14-11—25Turnovers 8-2—10 12-13—25Caused Turnovers 6-7—13 7-4—11Free Position Shots 1-2—3 2-2—4Fouls 7-8—15 4-5—9
A-68
Game 1February 25, 2003
Artificial Turf Facility, College Park, Md.
20 5
Game 2March 2, 2003
Artificial Turf Facility, College Park, Md.
10 8
Game 3March 6, 2003
Artificial Turf Facility, College Park, Md.
9 8 (ot)
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 33
2003 SEASON REVIEW • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
COLLEGE PARK, Md. – Maryland was forced to show its poise for
the second time in the same week and was able to come away with
an 8-7 overtime win over No. 7 Syracuse at the UM Artificial Turf
Facility. The win was the fourth-ranked Terps’ second overtime
victory of the week and pushed the team’s record to 4-0 (1-0 ACC).
The Orangewomen proved a tough foe for the Terrapins as they
successfully employed a tactic very familiar to Maryland teams over
the years — the stall. Syracuse held the ball for the majority of the
first half and were adept at keeping the ball in the Maryland end
with a very low-risk approach that staked them a 4-2 halftime lead
and limited the Terps to just seven first half shots. SU took only six
shots of its own, but four found the net with Monica Joines and
Leigh-Ann Zimmer each scoring twice.
In the second half, Maryland was able to push the tempo and
take better control of play. Sophomore Kristie Leggio opened the
second-half scoring on a free position shot just :58 into the second
frame before fellow sophomore Annie Collins was able to score on
an unassisted goal at the 35:13 mark to tie the game. Syracuse would
reclaim the lead on a Joines goal four minutes later before a Terp
newcomer asserted herself.
With 18:40 left in the second half, freshman Delia Cox scored
on a free position shot and then 19 seconds later took a feed from
Collins and finished to give Maryland the lead back at 6-5. Joines —
the game’s leading scorer with four goals — again answered, this
time with 10:57 left in regulation and the game was tied at six.
In the first overtime frame, Danielle Lillis made an impressive
run through the Terrapin defense to score the lone goal of the first
half of overtime and the Terps trailed as the teams switched ends.
Syracuse won the opening draw of the second half of overtime
but turned the ball over. Maryland settled in on offense before senior
Sonia Judd found sophomore Jessica Dorney at the 64:02 mark to
tie the game again at 7-7. Dorney then came up with the ensuing
draw and the Terps were again in business on the offensive end.
Box Score#7 SYRACUSE 4 2 1 0 — 7#4 MARYLAND 2 4 0 2 — 8INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Cox 2-1—3, Judd 1-2—3, Coppedge 2-0—2, Collins 1-1—2, Dorney1-0—1, Leggio 1-0—1. SU: Joines 4-0—4, Zimmer 2-0—2, Lillis 1-0—1,Wayne 0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 6-7-66:00; SU: C. Gigon, 13-8-66:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland SyracuseShots 7-16-2—25 6-5-1—12Saves 4-2-0—6 3-7-3—13Draw Controls 3-6-1—10 4-2-3—9Groundballs 10-15-2—27 4-10-1—15Turnovers 7-5-0—12 5-7-2—14Caused Turnovers 6-6-2—14 6-5-0—11Free Position Shots 1-4-0—5 1-3-0—4Fouls 5-3-1—9 5-9-1—15A-826
Maryland (5-0, 3-0 ACC) jumped out to an early 3-0 lead and the
Cavaliers were never able to net the equalizer.
The Terps jumped out early with two goals fromKellyCoppedge and a goal and an assist from first-time starter
Brooke Richards in the first 11:09 of the game. Virginia answered
back as Pfeiffer made a save and in the fast break off of it, a long
outlet pass found Cary Chasney, who fed Caitlin Banks on the goal
circle for Virginia’s first goal. Maryland won the ensuing draw but
UVa caused a turnover in the arc and Morgan Thalenberg picked up
the loose ball, starting the fast break that found Elizabeth Pinney
feeding Aumiller on the goal circle for Virginia’s second goal and a
3-2 deficit.
A Jessica Dorney goal with 1:18 to play in the half moved the
margin back to two at 4-2, and the Terps won the next draw. The
Terps were called for protecting the crosse, however, and the Cava-
liers gained possession. Banks fed Appelt, who rolled around the
crease and scored with 1:01 to play, pulling the Cavaliers within one
yet again. Maryland again won the draw and Dorney scored on an
eight-meter shot with :18 on the clock, sending the teams to half-
time with the Terps up 5-3.
Maryland scored the first two goals of the second half in a span
of 3:36 to give them a 7-3 cushion. Thalenberg won the draw and
got the ball upfield to Banks, who drove to the cage for a goal 24
seconds after the Terp tally. Another two-goal run from the Terra-
pins gave the Terps a 9-4 lead with 20 minutes to play.
From that point on, the Terps used a successful, plodding of-
fense that produced two more goals and ran enough clock that the
Cavalier comeback would end in futility. And though Virginia was
able to cut the Terp lead at one point in the second half to three, a
two-goal burst in a span of 40 seconds from Maryland moved the
margin back to five with 8:44 to play.
Box Score#3 MARYLAND 5 6 — 11#7 VIRGINIA 3 5 — 8INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 5-0—5, Dorney 3-1—4, Walker 0-3—3, Richards 1-1—2, Collins 0-2—2, Cox 1-0—1, Sommers 1-0—1, Judd 0-1—1. UVa:Aumiller 3-0—3, Banks 2-1—3, Chasney 2-1—3, Appelt 1-0—1, Connors0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 10-8-60:00; UVa: A. Pfeiffer, 12-11-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland VirginiaShots 15-9—24 10-11—21Saves 2-0—2 1-3—4Draw Controls 7-4—11 2-8—10Groundballs 16-13—29 16-9—25Turnovers 10-8—18 12-8—20Caused Turnovers 9-8—17 7-3—10Free Position Shots 2-0—2 1-3—4Fouls 1-11-12 5-8—13A-325
The run — which moved the score from 2-1 to to 10-1 in
Maryland’s favor — ended in the second half when Brown’s Kate
Staley scored on a free position shot. Coincidentally, three of
Brown’s five goals in the game came on free positions.
The Terrapins would score the next two goals to push its lead to
10 (12-2) and keep the clock running. From that point on, the teams
would each score three goals with the Terrapins successfully run-
ning out the clock.
Judd led all scorers with a hat trick and a pair of assists for five
points. Dorney netted her second hat trick in as many games with
both Judd and Dorney netting their three goals on just four shots.
Kelly Coppedge, Kristie Leggio and Walker all finished with three
points (two goals and an assist apiece) while Cox found the net
twice in the contest. Walker was also strong on the draw (five draw
controls) while senior netminder Alexis Venechanos continued
her solid work in the cage with six saves and just four goals allowed.
Box ScoreBROWN 1 4 — 5#3 MARYLAND 8 7 — 15INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Judd 3-2—5, Dorney 3-0—3, Coppedge 2-1—3, Leggio 2-1—3,Leggio 2-1—3, Walker 2-1—3, Cox 2-0—2, Shank 1-0—1, Richards 0-1—1. BU: Pierpont 2-0—2, Staley 1-1—2, Anneberg 1-0—1, Rottenberg1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 6-4-52:30, Gorman 0-1-4:03, Miles 0-0-3:27; BU:J. Southard, 12-15-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland BrownShots 16-18—34 5-4—9Saves 4-2—6 5-7—12Draw Controls 5-5—10 4-8—12Groundballs 17-9—26 9-11—20Turnovers 8-6—14 9-13—22Caused Turnovers 8-11—19 4-3—7Free Position Shots 1-2—2 4-4—8Fouls 7-5—12 3-7—10A-445
Game 4March 8, 2003
Artificial Turf Facility, College Park, Md.
8 7 (ot)
Game 5March 11, 2003
Klockner Stadium, Charlottesville, Va.
11 8CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — The Terrapins completed their turn-
around in the Atlantic Coast Conference as they beat No. 8 Virginia,
11-8, in Charlottesville to finish its conference regular season with a
3-0 mark. It was the Terps third-straight win against a Top 10 oppo-
nent.
Game 6March 15, 2003
Ludwig Field, College Park, Md.
15 5COLLEGE PARK, Md. – Maryland continued its strong play as it
handed Ivy League foe Brown a 15-5 defeat at Ludwig Field.
The third-ranked Terps took control from the get-go in the con-
test as freshman Delia Cox scored less than two minutes in while
sophomore Jessica Dorney — who is in the midst of the best of-
fensive run of her short career — made it 2-0 with an unassisted tally
at the 3:26 mark.
Brown’s Christine Anneberg would answer with what would be
the Bears’ lone goal of the first half on a free position shot, and then
the Terrapin offense took over. At the 12:56 mark, senior SoniaJudd found the net after a strong run in from the top of the arc and
that would be the beginning of the end for Brown as was the start of
an eight-goal Maryland run. Dorney, Acacia Walker and Judd all
led the way in the streak of eight unanswered goals as each found
the net twice.
Game 7March 18, 2003
Sculley-Fahey Field, Hanover, N.H.
9 2HANOVER, N.H. - In the battle of the unbeatens at Dartmouth’s
Scully-Fahey Field, Maryland took a 9-2 victory over No.10 Dartmouth
College. With the win, the Terrapins improved to 7-0 on the season
(3-0 ACC).
In the win, the Terps got out of the gate early, posting the game’s
first three goals. Sophomores’Kristie Leggio and Acacia Walkernetted the game’s first two goals before junior Kelly Coppedgenetter the third. When Dartmouth’s Whitney Jamison scored the
first goal of the game for the Big Green, the Terp lead was cut to
two. It was the closest the hometown team would get all day.
Maryland went on to run off the game’s next four goals, pushing
its lead out to 7-1 and then used a strong defense to coast home
with the win.
Freshman Delia Cox paced the Terrapins with her first career
hat trick. Sonia Judd led all scorers with four points behind a pair
of goals and a pair of assists.
On the defensive side, the Terps held the Dartmouth women to
their fewest goals scored since a 15-2 loss in 1996 at Princeton, also
ranked second at the time.
Between the pipes, Dartmouth’s Devon Wills made 10 saves, while
Maryland’s Alexis Venechanos stopped 12 shots on goal while al-
lowing just two goals. Venechanos left the game owning a career-best
.598 save percentage on the season and allowing just 6.84 goals per
outing. Fellow senior Cara Gorman came on in the final minute and
chipped in with a save of her own.
34 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • 2003 SEASON REVIEW
NORFOLK, Va. - The Terps handed Old Dominion University
a 16-5 defeat at Foreman Field in Norfolk, Va. Maryland pushed
its series record over the 16th-ranked Monarchs to 21-0.
Things weren’t as easy in the beginning as it would seem for
Maryland, as shot after shot either was saved, went wide or found
the post on the Terp offensive end. With 16:00 remaining in the
first half, Maryland owned a mere 3-2 advantage. From that point
until the half’s final three minutes, the Terps would again
outscore ODU 3-2 to push their lead to 6-4 in the game. With
those three minutes remaining, the Monarchs took possession
and looked to hold for a final shot, hoping for a tally that would
keep the Terps within a goal.
But with 30 seconds left, Annie Collins forced a turnover
in the Old Dominion end and pushed the ball upfield. The Terps
went from end to end and with three seconds left on the clock,
Jessica Dorney found senior Sonia Judd and Judd put the
ball away, giving Maryland a 7-4 halftime edge. It was an advan-
tage that seemed slim after the halftime box score indicated
that the Terps held a 20-8 advantage in shots.
The second half would feature Maryland taking less shots
(13), but finishing more. Kelly Coppedge started the second
half onslaught scoring a pair of goals in the first 5:02. ODU an-
swered at the 38:35 mark and that would be it for the Mon-
archs’ scoring on the day. Maryland rattled off the game’s next
(and final) seven goals, ultimately pushing the clock into run-
ning time and running away with victory.
Box Score#2 MARYLAND 7 9 — 16#16 OLD DOMINION 4 1 — 5INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 3-3—6, Walker 3-1—4, Cox 3-0—3, Dorney 2-1—3, Judd2-0—2, Leggio 1-1—2, Sommers 1-1—2, Lambert 1-0—1.ODU: Coane 2-0—2, Smith 0-2—2, Lindsey 1-1—2, Hensil 1-0—1,Shotwell 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 6-5-53:00, Miles 0-0-7:00; ODU: M. Gannon, 13-16-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland Old DominionShots 20-13—33 8-5—13Saves 2-4—6 10-3—13Draw Controls 9-6—15 3-6—9Groundballs 15-10—25 8-9—17Turnovers 5-6—11 6-10—16Caused Turnovers 6-9—15 1-1—2Free Position Shots 2-2—4 0-0—0Fouls 5-5—10 4-5—9A-250
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Kelly Coppedge scored the game winning
goal at 52:31 to give second-ranked Maryland (9-0) an 11-10 victory
over 11th-ranked Penn State (4-4) in the first game of the American
Lacrosse Conference/ACC Challenge.
Coppedge had three goals in the contest — as did Sonia Juddfor the Terrapins — while the junior’s second goal of the game was
the 100th of her two-plus year career. Penn State’s Colleen O’Hara
had a team-high three goals and three assists for the Nittany Lions.
Penn State opened the game by taking a 3-0 lead on goals by
Shari Maslin (7:37), Katie Jeschke (9:11) and Jamie Donohue (12:22).
Maryland responded with goals by Coppedge (19:01), AcaciaWalker (19:47) and Laura Warren (20:48) to tie the game at three.
A second goal by Coppedge (21:05) and one from Jessica Dorney(22:13) gave Maryland a 5-3 lead. The Nittany Lions cut the margin
to one at 5-4 with a Kristen Burke (26:09) goal. Maryland, behind
back (26:23)-to-back (26:31) goals by Judd and took a 7-4 lead. Penn
State closed out the scoring in the half with a goal credited to Maslin
at 28:27 and trailed Maryland, 7-5. The tally was actually an own
goal by the Terps’ Annie Collins who was trying to flick a loose ball
back to goalie Alexis Venechanos.
In the second half, Penn State goals by O’Hara (33:14) and Kristin
Wood (34:47) tied the game at seven. The Terrapins regained the
lead at 40:04 with a goal by Collins. The Nittany Lions tied the game
at eight with a O’Hara goal at 42:36. Penn State regained the lead at
9-8 with a free position goal by O’Hara. Maryland charged back to
tie the game at nine with a Dorney goal at 46:35. Judd made it, 10-9,
Maryland with a free position goal. Coppedge then scored the game
winner at 52:31. Penn State closed to within one at 11-10 at 54:15
with a free position goal by Donohue with the final goal of the game.
Box Score#11 PENN STATE 5 5 — 10#2 MARYLAND 7 4 — 11INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 3-2—5, Judd 3-1—4, Dorney 2-0—2, Collins 1-1—2,Walker 1-1—2, Warren 1-0—1.PSU: O’Hara 3-3—6, Donohue 2-0—2, Maslin 2-0—2, Burke 1-0—1,Jeschke 1-0—1, Wood 1-0—1, Chambers 0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 12-10-60:00. PSU: L. Tortorelli, 19-11-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland Penn StateShots 20-10—30 13-11—24Saves 8-4—12 9-10—19Draw Controls 11-6—17 2-4—6Groundballs 13-9—22 9-3—12Turnovers 6-4—10 7-3—10Caused Turnovers 4-4—8 1-1—2Free Position Shots 2-2—4 1-3—4Fouls 8-7—15 6-7—13A-426
test. Maryland’s start for the season marks the ninth time in school
history that it has started the season 10-0.
Maryland wasted little time in scoring just 46 second into the
game on a Sonia Judd goal, assisted by Kristie Leggio. Judd scored
again at 2:12 to make it 2-0. At 4:27, Leggio scored on an assist from
Acacia Walker. Terrapin goals by Jessica Dorney (12:49) and
Kelly Coppedge (15:39) gave Maryland a 5-0 lead. Ohio State’s
Regina Oliver put the Buckeyes on the scoreboard with a goal at
16:54. Oliver scored again at 22:01 with an assist from Tracey Bounds
to cut the Maryland lead to 5-2. The Terrapins closed out the first
half with a Walker goal at 22:59 to go at halftime leading 6-2.
Ohio State opened the second half with Oliver’s third goal at
31:55. A free position attempt by Caroline Weatherill at 33:18 cut
the Terrapin lead to 6-4. Maryland made it 7-4 with a goal by’LaurenWarren at 45:41. Ohio State countered that at 46:25 with a goal by
Shannon Wilson, making it 7-5. Maryland scored three consecutive
goals to build a 10-5 lead for the final margin. Annie Collins started
the run, scoring at 54:00. Just 59 seconds later, Coppedge scored
(54:59) her second goal of the game on an assist from Judd. Walker
closed out the scoring in the game with her second goal at 57:53, a
backhander in front of the cage that was assisted by Leggio.
Box Score#2 MARYLAND 6 4 — 10#16 OHIO STATE 2 3 — 5INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Judd 2-1—3, Walker 2-1—3, Leggio 1-2—3, Coppedge 2-0—2,Collins 1-0—1, Dorney 1-0—1, Warren 1-0—1. OSU: Oliver 3-0—3,Bounds 1-1—2, Weatherill 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 9-5-60:00. OSU: E. Forquer, 13-10-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland Ohio StateShots 21-13—34 8-12—20Saves 5-4—9 7-6—13Draw Controls 5-4—9 3-4—7Groundballs 18-9—27 6-7—13Turnovers 1-4—5 2-3—5Caused Turnovers 3-7—10 0-0—0Free Position Shots 4-2—6 1-3—4Fouls 6-12—18 10-8—18A-406
Game 8March 22, 2003
Foreman Field, Norfolk, Va.
16 5
Box Score#2 MARYLAND 5 4 — 9#10 DARTMOUTH 1 1 — 2INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Judd 2-2—4, Cox 3-0—3, Coppedge 1-2—3, Walker 2-0—2, Leggio1-0—1, Shank 1-0—1. DC: Jamison 1-0—1, Zimmer 1-0—1, Sanborn0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos, 12-2-58:41, C. Gorman., 1-0-1:19; DC: D. Wills,10-9-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland DartmouthShots 13-11—24 10-9—19Saves 7-6—13 4-6—10Draw Controls 4-3—7 3-3—6Groundballs 11-12—23 13-8—21Turnovers 7-5—12 9-5—14Caused Turnovers 6-2—8 4-3—7Free Position Shots 2-3—5 1-1—2Fouls 5-5—10 4-6—10A-200
Game 9March 28, 2003
Jesse Owens Stadium, Columbus, Ohio
ALC/ACC Challenge
11 10
Game 10March 30, 2003
Jesse Owens Stadium, Columbus, Ohio
ALC/ACC Challenge
10 5COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Terps handed 16th-ranked Ohio State (7-
2) a 10-5 loss in the final game of the American Lacrosse Confer-
ence/ACC Challange held at the Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium.
Playing in a strong breeze with a temperature of 33 degrees (-4
wind chill) Maryland scored the first five goals of the game and never
allowed the Buckeyes to come closer than two (6-4, 7-5) in the con-
Game 11April 2, 2003
North Kehoe Field, Washington, D.C.
13 10WASHINGTON, D.C. - The Terps overcame more than one scare today
and ultimately came away triumphant,beating No. 6 Georgetown, 13-10,
at North Kehoe Field. The win pushed No. 1 Maryland to 11-0 (3-0 ACC)
on the season, while the Hoyas fell to 6-3.
Things did not look good early on for the Terps as Georgetown
jumped out to a 3-1 lead in the game’s first 12 minutes. Prior to the
Hoyas’ third goal of the game, standout senior netminder AlexisVenechanos took a wrong step on her right knee, necessitating
that she come to the sideline for evaluation. She came out at the
18:41 mark in the first half and fellow senior Cara Gorman came in
to try to right the ship.
Less than a minute later, GU tallied another goal to up its lead to
4-1 before Kristie Leggio found the net for the Terps to cut the
deficit back to two. Venechanos then made a return to the cage for
the Terps but had lost her mobility and ultimately allowed two more
goals before her knee finally gave way for good. When sophomore
Kirah Miles entered with 5:30 left in the half, the Terps were down
6-4 and momentum sat with the blue and gray of Georgetown.
As the half came to a close, Maryland trailed 8-5 — its largest
halftime deficit of the season — and was searching for answers on
both ends of the field.
The first answer came in the 5-2 frame of Gorman. Georgetown
came out confident and continued its attack in the second half, but
Gorman had returned to the game and was giving the Terps a boost
with key save after save in the early minutes of the frame. After a
goal by freshman Delia Cox and another by Jessica Dorney on a
nice feed from Acacia Walker, Maryland was back within a goal
and searching for more.
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 35
2003 SEASON REVIEW • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
Game 13April 10, 2003
Ludwig Field, College Park, Md.
21 6
Junior Kelly Coppedge netted an unassisted goal to tie the
score at eight and with 18:35 left in the second half, it was Cox again
taking charge and finding the net to give Maryland its first lead of
the day.
The Terps would ultimately run off eight second half goals and
limit the host Hoyas to two in pulling away with the three-goal win,
but again, Gorman was the story in the second half.
As she did in several games a year ago, Gorman simply gave the
Terps a boost by shutting down their opponent. She finished the
game with 10 saves — all in the second half — while allowing just
three goals, two of which came in the second half.
Box Score#1 MARYLAND 5 8 — 13#6 GEORGETOWN 8 2 — 10INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Cox 4-0—4, Coppedge 3-1—4, Collins 2-0—2, Dorney 2-0—2,Warren 1-1—2, Leggio 1-1—2, Walker 0-2—2. GU: Peters 2-0—2,Stanwick 2-0—2, Oliphant 1-1—2, Bernier 1-0—1, Chambers 1-0—1,Lozano 1-0—1, Ryan 1-0—1, Polk-Williams 1-0—1, Pica 0-1—1, Weickel0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: C. Gorman, 10-3-32:47, A. Venechanos, 4-5-21:43, K. Miles 0-2-5:30. GU: S. Robinson, 4-13-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland GeorgetownShots 9-10—19 15-13—28Saves 4-10—14 3-1—4Draw Controls 9-3—12 4-8—12Groundballs 5-8—13 13-7—20Turnovers 8-6—14 3-3—6Caused Turnovers 4-3—7 7-7—14Free Position Shots 4-1—5 2-2—4Fouls 5-6—11 11-6—17A-608
ever, her shot with 1:14 left went wide right and James Madison ran
down the ground ball. The Dukes then successfully ran out the
clock under a barrage of attacking Maryland defenders.
Box Score#12 JAMES MADISON 6 3 — 9#1 MARYLAND 6 2 — 8INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 1-2—3, Cox 2-0—2, Judd 2-0—2, Leggio 2-0—2, Walker1-0—1. JMU: Decker 4-0—4, Staedt 3-1—4, Brownbridge 1-0—1,McKenzie 1-0—1, Chantler 0-1—1, Davis 0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: C. Gorman, 8-9-60:00. JMU: A. Altig, 3-3-22:00; L. King 4-5-38:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland James MadisonShots 14-6—20 15-6—21Saves 7-1—8 4-3—7Draw Controls 5-2—7 8-4—12Groundballs 10-5—15 13-10—23Turnovers 6-4—10 5-6—11Caused Turnovers 4-4—8 3-2—5Free Position Shots 3-2—5 2-1—3Fouls 6-9—15 4-1—5A-368
Game 12April 5, 2003
Byrd Stadium, College Park, Md.
9 8COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Maryland was handed its first loss of the 2003
campaign as the James Madison Dukes pulled out a 9-8 win at Byrd
Stadium. The Terrapins — who came from behind on Wednesday
against Georgetown — now stand at 11-1 (3-0 ACC) while JMU moves
to 8-3 on the season.
In the first half, the Terps had trouble getting started on the
offensive end and James Madison took advantage. The Dukes got
strong play from its two leading scorers — Lisa Staedt and Gail Decker
— as the duo rattled off two goals apiece in the game’s first 13:29,
staking JMU to a 4-1 lead.
With 11:20 left in the half, the Terp offense got going as senior
Sonia Judd scored on a free position goal. Freshman Delia Cox— who would finish the week with six goals — and sophomore
Kristie Leggio each tallied a pair of goals before the end of the half
and with the Dukes finding the net twice in the half’s final 10 min-
utes, the two teams would head to the locker room with the score
knotted at six.
As it did in the first half, the Terrapins started slow in the second
half and James Madison took advantage. Staedt scored her third goal
of the game at the 32:36 mark, Decker found the net at 44:39 and
Brooke McKenzie scored at 46:20 and the Terps all of a sudden trailed
by three with less than 15 minutes remaining.
Maryland started its comeback with 11:21 left in the game as Judd
again scored on a free position, but the Dukes — as they did all game
— won the ensuing draw and started running the clock. After a turn-
over, JMU got the ball back with 9:00 remaining and stalled for the
next six minutes, holding the ball on the wings. With 2:56 left, the
Dukes turned it over and Judd came away with the ground ball and
headed for goal. Fourteen seconds later, she found Acacia Walkerin front of the net and the James Madison lead was cut to one.
The Dukes again came away with the next draw and successfully
held the ball for over a minute. With 1:26 left, Annie Collins caused
a turnover near midfield and Judd scooped it up, again racing to the
goal. She was ultimately fouled inside the eight meter and awarded
a free position, her second of the game. Uncharacteristically, how-
Game 14April 12, 2003
Ludwig Field, College Park, Md.
19 4COLLEGE PARK, MD. – The second-ranked Maryland women’s la-
crosse team beat No. 19 Johns Hopkins , 19-4. With the win, the
Terrapins move to 13-1 (3-0 ACC) on the season while the Blue Jays
fall to 6-3.
It didn’t take long for Maryland to show what kind of day it would
be as it took the opening draw, senior Sonia Judd took a few steps,
saw a streaking Kelly Coppedge and fed the junior for a goal just 19
seconds in. The Terps then ran off the game’s next seven goals and
17:55 in, the Terrapins were up 7-0.
Coppedge was the story of the day, scoring a career-high seven
goals and besting her top single-game mark set just four days ago
against William & Mary when she had six. She also excelled in cor-
ralling loose balls as she posted a team-high five draw controls in
the game to go along with three ground balls.
As a team, Maryland outshot Hopkins 42-15, had 13 caused turn-
overs (compared to JHU’s seven) and won 16 of 25 draw controls.
Joining Coppedge atop the stat column were Judd, who finished
with five points on three goals and two assists.
Senior goalkeeper Alexis Venechanos made a successful re-
turn from injury as she got the win, allowing four goals while mak-
ing five saves. Sophomore Kirah Miles closed the game’s final five
minutes, coming up with two saves.
Box Score#19 JOHNS HOPKINS 2 2 — 4#2 MARYLAND 11 8 — 19INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 7-0—7, Judd 3-2—5, Leggio 1-3—4, Walker 1-3—4,Collins 3-0—3, Cox 3-0—3, Dorney 1-0—1, Warren 0-1—1. JHU:Barcomb 1-1—2, Me. Burnett 1-0—1, Lipka 1-0—1, Pearce 1-0—1,Riordan 0-1—1, Voight 0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos 5-4-54:58, K. Miles 2-0-5:02.JHU: J. McDonald 7-11-30:00, L. Riddick 18-8-30:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland Johns HopkinsShots 19-23—42 7-8—15Saves 3-4—7 7-18—25Draw Controls 8-7—15 6-9—15Groundballs 18-17—35 17-29—46Turnovers 12-11—23 16-28—44Caused Turnovers 6-7—13 6-7—13Free Position Shots 3-2—5 0-0—0Fouls 1-2—3 8-16—24A-720
COLLEGE PARK, MD. – The second-ranked Terps got back in the
win column in a big way today on a cold, wet day at Ludwig Field as
they defeated The College of William & Mary, 21-5. The Terrapins
are now 12-1 while the Tribe drops to 1-11.
The game did not get off to the start one would expect as the
Tribe scored the game’s first two goals and at the 4:35 mark, the
Terps were in a 2-0 hole.
Sophomore Acacia Walker would jump start the Maryland of-
fense just 19 seconds later as she fed a cutting Kelly Coppedge for
the Terrapins’ first goal of the game. Walker would dish out three
more assists in the next five minutes and senior Sonia Judd would
net a hat trick in the span and all of a sudden Maryland led, 6-2.
William & Mary’s Allison Evans scored on a free position shot at
the 20:24 mark to cut the lead to 6-3 and the Terps were off to the
races again. Maryland ran off the game’s next nine goals with
Coppedge and Judd each getting three more in the span and with
26:55 left to go in the game, the Terrapins had a 15-3 lead. Evans
would again break the string and the Terps ran off four more to lead
19-4 with the game in running time.
In the end, Judd led all scorers while posting a career-high with
nine points and seven goals, most by a Terp since fellow Aussie and
current Maryland assistant Jen Adams posted eight goals and four
assists against Johns Hopkins on April 14th of 2001. Coppedge set a
career-high as well with her six goals, improving on her previous best
of five set five times in her career.
Box ScoreWILLIAM & MARY 3 3 — 6#2 MARYLAND 13 8 — 21INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Judd 7-2—9, Coppedge 6-0—6, Walker 1-4—5, Leggio 3-1—4, Collins2-1—3, Mallon 0-2—2, Dorney 1-0—1, McLeod 1-0—1, Shank 0-1—1.W&M: Evans 2-0—2, Work 2-0—2, Lang 1-0—1, Lewis 1-0—1, Ritz 0-1—1, Rutledge 0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: K. Miles 5-3-55:25, C. Gorman 0-2-4:35.W&M: S. Richards 11-17-45:30, K. Turnbaugh 2-4-14:30.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland William & MaryShots 25-14—39 5-5—10Saves 2-3—5 8-5—13Draw Controls 13-11—24 4-1—5Groundballs 16-10—26 13-14—27Turnovers 8-9—17 14-10—24Caused Turnovers 6-4—10 2-4—6Free Position Shots 4-1—5 0-2—2Fouls 9-2—11 11-10—21A-368
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Maryland advanced to the ACC champi-
onship game for the sixth time in seven years with a dominating 13-
5 victory over the fourth-seeded North Carolina Tar Heels on a rainy
afternoon at Klockner Stadium.
Recently announced ACC Player of the Year Kelly Coppedgeand fellow All-ACC pick Sonia Judd each scored four goals and
added an assist to lead all scorers with five points. All-ACC goalie
Alexis Venechanos continued her sensational play with 11 saves
while Delia Cox also tallied a pair of goals and an assist.
Maryland jumped out to a 4-0 lead just 17:33 in as Judd was on
fire early, tallying three goals before 15 minutes had elapsed in the
contest. Cox chipped in the other goal in the four goal run before
North Carolina got on the board for the first time as Brooke Dieringer
scored with 12:12 left in the first half.
Game 15April 18, 2003
Klockner Stadium, Charlottesville, Va.
ACC Tournament Semifinals
13 5
36 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • 2003 SEASON REVIEW
Sophomore Acacia Walker led all scorers with five points, con-
verting two of her four shots on goal and dishing out three assists.
Box Score#4 VIRGINIA 1 5 — 6#2 MARYLAND 7 4 — 11INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Walker 2-3—5, Collins 3-1—4, Coppedge 2-1—3, Judd 1-2—3,Leggio 2-0—2, Dorney 1-0—1.UVa: Aumiller 2-1—3, Appelt 2-0—2, Banks 0-2—2, Chasney 1-0—1,Thalenberg 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos 13-6-60:00. UVa: A. Pfeiffer 6-11-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland VirginiaShots 12-9—21 9-16—25Saves 5-8—13 3-1—4Draw Controls 7-5—12 2-5—7Groundballs 8-10—18 13-14—27Turnovers 9-10—19 5-5—10Caused Turnovers 5-3—8 5-5—10Free Position Shots 1-1—2 1-3—4Fouls 8-5—13 6-3—9A-3355
COLLEGE PARK, MD. — Maryland suffered its worse defeat of the
2003 campaign in falling to No. 6 Princeton, 13-6. The loss — just
the Terps’ second of the season — drops Maryland to 16-2 (3-0 ACC)
while the Tigers move to 11-4 with the upset.
Second-ranked Maryland actually opened scoring in the game
as Annie Collins ran in an unassisted goal at 11:27. Princeton an-
swered less than a minute later but Jessica Dorney put the Terra-
pins back on top with an unassisted goal of her own at 13:17.
Scoring remained slow for the first 20 minutes and Maryland
maintained its 2-1 lead, but the Tiger offense came alive when the
clock hit 10:00 in the first half. Whitney Miller got things started
with a pair of goals that kicked off a four-goal Tiger run with Lindsey
Biles scoring the other two in a four minute stretch. Terp junior
Kelly Coppedge found the net on an unassisted goal with 2:38 left
in the half and freshman Delia Cox followed with another goal :30
later on a feed from senior Julie Shank and the two teams would
head to the half with a goal separating them (5-4 Princeton).
When Coppedge was able to finish after a pass from AcaciaWalker at 30:31, the Terps looked like they were back on track
with the score knotted at five. Three minutes later, Princeton would
start a run that would dampen the Maryland hopes.
Leigh Slonaker scored three goals in a five-goal Tiger run that
moved the score from 5-5 to 10-5 in Princeton’s favor and just nine
minutes remained on the clock. Coppedge would net her third
goal of the game with 5:25 left, but the Tigers continued to win
draws and play keep away while drawing the Terrapin defense away
from the net which gave Princeton opportunities to tack on three
more for the final seven-goal margin.
Box Score#6 PRINCETON 5 8 — 13#2 MARYLAND 4 2 — 6INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 3-0—3, Collins 1-0—1, Cox 1-0—1, Dorney 1-0—1,Shank 0-1—1, Walker 0-1—1. PU: Slonaker 4-2—6, Miller 3-2—5, Pil-lion 2-1—3, Biles 2-0—2, Flore 1-0—1, Sherry 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos 7-13-60:00. PU: S. Kolodner 10-6-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland PrincetonShots 11-9—20 11-12—23Saves 3-4—7 5-5—10Draw Controls 3-5—8 7-6—13Groundballs 12-7—19 11-9—20Turnovers 5-7—12 8-6—14Caused Turnovers 6-5—11 4-4—8Free Position Shots 1-1—2 2-1—3Fouls 4-6—10 4-3—7A-470
Game 16April 20, 2003
Klockner Stadium, Charlottesville, Va.
ACC Tournament Championship
11 6CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — The Terps officially completed their re-
turn to the top of the Atlantic Coast Conference with an impressive
11-6 win over host and No. 3 seed Virginia in the ACC Finals. The
win gave Maryland the tournament championship after it had se-
cured the No. 1 seed with a perfect 3-0 regular season mark.
Five Terps were honored for their play in the tournament as
seniors Sonia Judd and Julie Shank were joined by juniors AnnieCollins and Kelly Coppedge on the all-tournament team. Senior
goalie Alexis Venechanos was named the tournament’s most valu-
able player.
The Terrapins (15-1, 3-0 ACC) were dominant from start to fin-
ish. The game began with the two teams exchanging goals in the
first six minutes. Maryland then ran off the half’s next six goals to
take a 7-1 lead to the locker room. In the run, four different Terps
found the net with Coppedge and Kristie Leggio leading the way
with two goals apiece. The Terrapin defense was tough in the half,
limiting the Cavaliers (12-4) to just nine shots.
The second half saw Virginia working to try to get back in the
game, but the ‘Hoos chipped away at the Maryland lead a little too
slow considering their were down six at the break. Morgan
Thalenberg and Cary Chasney each scored to cut the Maryland lead
to 7-3 and the Cavaliers successfully held the Terps in check for the
first 15 minutes of the second frame.
As she did in the first half, Collins would get Maryland on the
board for the first time in the second half, converting on a free po-
sition shot at 44:51. Virginia would answer at the 46:00 mark, but
that four-goal margin would be as close as UVa would come the
remainder of the day.
Maryland would score three more times and Venechanos would
make save after save en route to victory. For the game, Venechanos
set a season high with 13 saves while she stopped all four of Virginia’s
free position attempts on the day.
Maryland poured on the offense again after the Tar Heels scored
the first goal of the second half, netting the next seven goals includ-
ing two by Coppedge along with single goals by Acacia Walker,
Judd, Jessica Dorney, Cox and Annie Collins to take a 13-2 lead
with 6:31 left in the game.
Carolina mounted a mild comeback scoring the the next three
goals to bring the Heels to within 13-5 with 1:30 left, but Maryland’s
lead was too big for the 14th-ranked Tar Heels to overcome.
The Terps, the nation’s No. 2 team in the latest IWLCA poll, posted
their best defensive outing in an ACC game since they held Virginia to
just five goals in a 13-5 victory on April 25, 1999 in the ACC Tourna-
ment. It was also the fewest goals North Carolina has scored against
the Terps since a 14-2 Maryland win on March 9, 1996.
Box Score#14 NORTH CAROLINA 1 4 — 5#2 MARYLAND 6 7 — 13INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Judd 4-1—5, Coppedge 4-1—5, Cox 2-1—3, Walker 1-0—1, Dorney1-0—1, Collins 1-0—1.UNC: Dieringer 2-0—2, Higgins 1-0—1, McCarthy 1-0—1, Ames 1-0—1, Young 0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos 11-5-60:00. UNC: K. Hoffman 1-6-30:00, M.Garafalo 1-7-30:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland North CarolinaShots 11-11—22 7-9—16Saves 4-8—12 1-1—2Draw Controls 6-6—12 2-6—8Groundballs 7-11—18 9-6—15Turnovers 8-7—15 8-7—15Caused Turnovers 4-3—7 7-4—11Free Position Shots 0-2—2 1-4—5Fouls 7-10—17 6-8—14A-2330
Game 17April 26, 2003
Ludwig Field, College Park, Md.
18 1COLLEGE PARK, MD. — The Terrapins came away with an 18-1 victory
over Virginia Tech on a muddy, rain-soaked Ludwig Field. The game —
which was the first meeting between the two teams — was called with
9:38 left in the second half due to the poor field conditions.
Maryland got on the board early and often in moving to 16-1 (3-
0 ACC) on the season. Junior Kelly Coppedge and freshman DeliaCox each netted two in the game’s first eight minutes while sopho-
more Annie Collins added another and the Terps were off and
running with a 5-0 advantage. The muddy conditions had both teams
struggling to maintain possession on the offensive end, but despite
the troubles, Maryland seemed to be aided by the field conditions
when it came to their work in transition on the offensive end.
Virginia got on the board for the first time with 18:47 left in the
half on a free position shot by Stephanie Jones. That would be the
end of scoring on the day for the Hokies.
The Terps would push their lead from 5-1 to 15-1 by the half.
For the first time this season, every Terp who was eligible to play
saw action including all three goalies. The on-field diversity showed
in the final stat line.
Players who scored for the first time in their careers included
freshmen Emily Jaissle (three assists) and Lauren Reid (one goal).
Coppedge led all scorers with five goals and an assist, Cox posted a
hat trick, Collins netted a pair of goals and an assist and KristieLeggio posted a career-high three assists. Two other Terps (Sonia
Judd and Molly Lambert) posted a pair of goals in the win.
Box ScoreVIRGINIA TECH 1 0 — 1#2 MARYLAND 15 3 — 18INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 5-1—6, Cox 3-0—3, Collins 2-1—3, Jaissle 0-3—3, Leggio0-3—3, Judd 2-0—2, Lambert 2-0—2, Dorney 1-1—2, Walker 0-2—2,Reid 1-0—1, Richards 1-0—1, Warren 1-0—1. VT: Jones 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos 1-1-15:58, C. Gorman 0-0-14:02, K. Miles 2-0-21:22.VT: J. McGraw 8-18-51:22.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland Virginia TechShots 25-7—32 3-5—8Saves 1-2—2 6-2—8Draw Controls 12-2—14 5-3—8Groundballs 16-13—29 14-15—29Turnovers 13-6—19 18-10—28Caused Turnovers 8-2—10 4-4—8Free Position Shots 4-1—5 2-1—3Fouls 4-2—6 7-2—9A-612
Game 18April 30, 2003
Ludwig Field, College Park, Md.
13 6
Game 19May 3, 2003
Ludwig Field, College Park, Md.
9 8COLLEGE PARK, MD. — In a game that more than lived up to its
billing, the second-ranked Terrapins fell in a 9-8 heartbreaker to
top-ranked Loyola in front of nearly a thousand fans at Ludwig Field.
The Greyhounds got the win with four unanswered goals in the
game’s last 13:00, but it was a game that left one with the feeling
that if the game had another 30 minutes, it still would have finished
with a one-goal margin.
Loyola took charge in the early going, scoring the game’s first
three goals while goalkeeper Kim Lawton held the Terrapins at bay.
Delia Cox got things started for the Terps, however, when she
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 37
2003 SEASON REVIEW • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSEscored on an eight meter at the 7:47 mark. Less than five minutes
later, junior Kelly Coppedge redirected what looked like an er-
rant Kristie Leggio shot to cut the margin to one before Cox scored
on another free position shot just over a minute later.
Sonia Judd would give the Terps their first lead of the day after
scoring on a feed from Coppedge while senior goalie AlexisVenechanos made save after save in holding Loyola scoreless for
over 19 minutes. That drought would end with Kristi Korrow’s goal
on a free position shot with just under four minutes left in the half
and the score was knotted back at four.
The half came to a close with Maryland controlling the ball in
their end for the final minute. Judd ultimately made her way inside
the arc and was fouled, a play that would culminate in her finding
the net on a free position shot with :03 left in the frame.
The second half began the same as the first ended as Maryland
scored just :36 into the period as Annie Collins found a cutting
Coppedge. Collins later took matter into her own hands on an unas-
sisted goal and when Judd found sophomore Jessica Dorney in front
of the net for the Terps’ eighth goal of the game, all of a sudden Mary-
land was on top by three goals with just over 20 minutes remaining.
Things still looked good for the Terps with just under 13:00 left,
but Greyhound senior Suzanne Eyler scored on an unassisted goal
and what would be a sign of things to come. After a Jen Schuerholz
free position goal, Eyler would score one of her own and the game
was tied at 8-8 with pressure mounting.
Box Score#1 LOYOLA 4 5 — 9#2 MARYLAND 5 3 — 8INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 2-1—3, Judd 2-1—3, Cox 2-0—2, Collins 1-1—2, Dorney1-0—1, Leggio 0-1—1. LC: Eyler 4-0—4, Borrone 1-0—1, Shacklock 1-0—1, Tyrell 1-0—1, Walker 1-0—1, Schuerholz 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos 12-9-60:00. LC: K. Lawton 6-5-30:00, C. Nicolaus5-3-30:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland LoyolaShots 13-7—20 10-8—18Saves 8-4—12 6-5—11Draw Controls 7-4—11 3-5—8Groundballs 8-8—16 14-18—32Turnovers 7-6—13 3-5—8Caused Turnovers 4-0—4 5-2—7Free Position Shots 6-1—7 3-2—5Fouls 5-5—10 13-20—33A-962
off nine unanswered goals. In this run, Dorney scored three while
junior Kelly Coppedge and senior Sonia Judd each added a pair.
With just under 15:00 remaining, Maryland owned a 20-3 lead and
began to empty its bench.
With their 26 goals, the Terrapins broke the NCAA tournament
mark set by Princeton which posted 25 in opening round action a
year ago against LeMoyne on its way to the national title. The Terps
also set an NCAA tournament record today for shots with 52, sur-
passing the mark of 48 by Delaware in 1984 while the 20-goal margin
of victory was also the second-most ever in an NCAA game (Princeton
beat LeMoyne by 22 last year).
Among the single-game season highs for Maryland as a team were
its totals in shots (52), ground balls (40) and draw controls (24).
Box ScoreTEMPLE 2 4 — 6#2 MARYLAND 10 16 — 26INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Dorney 5-1—6, Coppedge 4-1—5, Walker 3-2—5, Judd 3-1—4,Cox 2-2—4, Collins 1-3—4, Leggio 2-1—3, Richards 2-1—3, Lambert 1-2—3, Warren 1-1—2, McLeod 1-0—1, Sommers 1-0—1, Shank 0-1—1.TU: Pulaski 3-0—3, Condon 1-0—1, Glavin 1-0—1, Radcliffe 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos 5-4-49:28, C. Gorman 1-1-8:32, K. Miles 0-1-2:00.TU: S. Oommen 17-26-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland TempleShots 27-25—52 5-11—16Saves 2-4—6 10-7—17Draw Controls 8-16—24 3-6—9Groundballs 29-11—40 14-6—20Turnovers 11-5—16 10-5—15Caused Turnovers 7-3—10 5-3—8Free Position Shots 1-1—2 1-1—2Fouls 4-4—8 3-9—12A-249
COLLEGE PARK, MD. — The second-seeded Terps posted an over-
whelming 26-6 win over Temple at Ludwig Field in NCAA first round
matchup. In the win, the Terrapins (17-3, 3-0 ACC) set an NCAA
tournament record for goals while posting their largest goal total
since 1986 (35 against Towson).
Maryland has now won 22 of its last 23 NCAA games and own a
33-9 record in NCAA tournament action. Its win over Temple (13-6,
7-0 Atlantic 10) was their 13th-in-a-row against the Owls and it now
own a 15-10-1 advantage in the series that began in 1981.
Ten minutes into the game, no one would have predicted that 32
goals would be scored between the two teams as the contest’s first
goal came with nearly 10 minutes elapsed in the first half as AnnieCollins scored on an unassisted goal at 9:32. Up until that point,
Temple netminder Sheena Oommen had been strong, making save
after save. She finished the first half with 10 saves.
After the Owls scored with 16:24 left in the half, the Terrapin
offense took over. Acacia Walker and Jessica Dorney scored a
pair of goals to help key an eight-goal Maryland run. Temple’s Megan
Condon found the net on an unassisted run and the two teams went
to the half with the Terps ahead, 10-2.
In the second half, the Terps and Owls exchanged a pair of goals
early and then it was off to the races again for Maryland as it then ran
Game 20May 8, 2003
Ludwig Field, College Park, Md.
NCAA Tournament First Round
26 6
Game 21May 11, 2003
Curley Field, Baltimore, Md.
NCAA Tournament Quarterfinals
13 5COLLEGE PARK, MD. — Maryland earned its 13th trip in the last 14
years to the NCAA semifinals behind a 13-5 win over Dartmouth Col-
lege in Baltimore. The Terps (18-3, 3-0 ACC) beat the Big Green (13-
5) despite losing some of their home field advantage. Due to poor
conditions at Ludwig Field, the game was pushed back to 3:30 p.m.
and was played at Curley Field on the campus of Loyola College.
The first half of the contest was nip-and-tuck and a battle of con-
trasting styles. In typical fashion, Maryland sought to score as soon
as an opportunity presented itself while Dartmouth ran a deliber-
ate, slow-down approach that kept the Terps at bay better than in
the first meeting between the two schools.
Maryland scored the game’s first two goals as Kristie Leggioscored on a free position followed by an unassisted goal by DeliaCox at the 6:08 mark. Dartmouth returned the favor on goals by
Whitney Jamison and Lana Smith before the Terps ran off four un-
answered in the frame’s last seven minutes. In that span, SoniaJudd netted two including one on a feed from Kelly Coppedgefrom behind the net.
The half seemed to be well in hand for Maryland but Dartmouth
did not let up as Smith scored on an unassisted goal with 1:06 left
before the break and then Casey Hazel scored just :12 later and the
two schools would take it to the half with just two goals separating
them (6-4, Maryland).
Neither team was able to score in the early going of the second
half and when Smith scored her third goal of the game, Maryland
found itself only ahead by a goal. The Big Green had a chance to tie
the game a minute later, but Terp goalie Alexis Venechanos saved
a Dartmouth free position shot and the Terrapins took over.
Maryland would score all seven of its goals after the save starting
with Coppedge’s unassisted score with 15:33 left. The junior would
score two more in the half, as would Acacia Walker, while the
Terp defense held the Big Green to a total of just seven second half
shots, five of which came on awarded free position attempts.
Game 22May 16, 2003
Carrier Dome, Syracuse, N.Y.
NCAA Tournament Semifinals
9 8
Box Score#6 DARTMOUTH 4 1 — 5#2 MARYLAND 6 7 — 13INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Coppedge 4-1—5, Cox 3-0—3, Judd 2-1—3, Walker 2-1—3, Leggio1-2—3, Warren 1-0—1.DC: Smith 3-1—4, Jamison 1-0—1, Hazel 1-0—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos 9-5-60:00. DC: D. Wills 7-13-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland DartmouthShots 12-17—29 10-7—17Saves 6-3—9 3-4—7Draw Controls 6-6—12 5-3—8Groundballs 12-16—28 9-8—17Turnovers 5-4—9 4-6—10Caused Turnovers 2-3—5 4-4—8Free Position Shots 2-2—4 0-5—5Fouls 7-8—15 9-4—13A-389
SYRACUSE, N.Y. - The NCAA semifinals were not kind to higher seeds
or teams from Maryland as the second-seeded University of Mary-
land women’s lacrosse team dropped a heartbreaker to third-seeded
Virginia, 9-8, at Syracuse University’s Carrier Dome.
Maryland fell behind early in the game, staking the Wahoos a 4-2
halftime lead. But the youthful Terrapins — who will return all but
three starters next year — stormed back in the second half. The team
got going when Acacia Walker’s errant pass bounced past her in-
tended target then past UVa goalie Andrea Pfeiffer and into the net.
The first came just :13 after Walker’s goal as Laura Warren took the
draw, fed freshman Delia Cox who found a streaking Kristie Leggio for
a quick goal that tied the game at four. Just under three minutes later,
Walker turned on the baseline and found a cutting Jessica Dorneywho one-timed it for a one-goal Terp lead. The four-goal run was capped
by another one-timer, this time when Warren assisted Leggio for her
second goal in the string and the Terrapins led 6-4.
Virginia got back in the game with a pair of goals and at the 48:58
mark, the two teams were tied at six. With 8:23 remaining, Sonia
Judd got in on the act for the first time on the night as she scored on
an unassisted goal. She put the Terps up two just 1:12 later after a
nice feed from Walker — her second of the night — and Maryland
was sitting on an 8-6 lead with 7:11 remaining. The Cavs
got a pair of goals from Caitlin Banks to tie the game. Virginia then
had several chances to take the lead in the final three minutes but
Alexis Venechanos made two big saves at point-blank range to keep
the Terps in it.
The game winner ultimately came with just 1:33 left when UVa’s
Cary Chasney beat Venechanos before the Cavs won the game’s final
draw and ran out the clock. In the loss, there were some notable
efforts for the Terps, first being the defense’s holding the nation’s
leading scorer — Lauren Aumiller — to just one point.
Box Score#3 VIRGINIA 4 5 — 9#2 MARYLAND 2 6 — 8INDIVIDUAL SCORING (G-A—Pts.)UM: Walker 1-2—3, Coppedge 2-0—2, Leggio 2-0—2, Judd 2-0—2,Dorney 1-1—2, Cox 0-1—1, Warren 0-1—1. UVa: Appelt 2-1—3,Chasney 2-0—2, Banks 2-0—2, Aumiller 1-0—1, Lazarus 1-0—1, Young1-0—1, Connors 0-1—1.GOALIES (Sv.-GA-Min.)UM: A. Venechanos 8-9-60:00. UVa: A. Pfieffer 5-8-60:00.TEAM STATSCategory Maryland VirginiaShots 8-8—16 11-17—28Saves 2-6—8 4-1—5Draw Controls 6-6—12 1-6—7Groundballs 15-12—27 19-14—33Turnovers 9-8—17 6-5—11Caused Turnovers 3-3—6 4-4—8Free Position Shots 0-0—0 1-3—4Fouls 6-14—20 2-1—3
38 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • 2003 SEASON REVIEW
2003 ACC Season ReviewTerps Claim Regular and Postseason Titles
ACC TournamentAt Klockner Stadium, Charlottesville, Va., April 18-20Semifinals:#1 Maryland d. #4 North Carolina, 13-5
#3 Virginia d. Duke, 12-9
Finals:#1 Maryland d. Virginia, 11-6
All-Tournament TeamBeth Ames, North Carolina
Lauren Aumiller, Virginia
Annie Collins, MarylandKelly Coppedge, MarylandAndy Fortino, North Carolina
Lauren Gallagher, Duke
Sonia Judd, MarylandMeghan Miller, Duke
Julie Shank, MarylandTiffany Schummer, Virginia
Tournament MVPAlexis Venechanos, Maryland
ACC StandingsACC GAMES
W L Pct Hm. Rd.
MARYLAND 3 0 1.000 2-0 1-0Duke 2 1 .667 1-0 1-1
Virginia 1 2 .333 0-2 1-0
North Carolina 0 3 .000 0-1 0-2
ALL GAMESW L Pct Hm. Rd. Neu. NCAAs
MARYLAND 18 3 .818 7-3 7-0 3-1 NCAA SemifinalsDuke 13 5 .722 7-2 6-3 0-0 NCAA First Round
Virginia 17 5 .773 8-3 8-1 1-1 NCAA Finals
North Carolina 7 9 .438 6-2 1-5 0-2
All-ACC SelectionsAttack
Any Appelt Virginia
Sonia Judd Maryland
Midfield
Lauren Aumiller Virginia
Kelly Coppedge MarylandKate Kaiser Duke
Defense
Tiffany Schummer Virginia
Meghan Walters Duke
Goalkeeper
Alexis Venechanos Maryland
At-Large
Andrea Fortino North Carolina
Lauren Gallagher Duke
Lauri Kenis Virginia
Julie Shank Maryland
PLAYER OF THE YEARKelly Coppedge Maryland
ROOKIE OF THE YEARKatie Chrest Duke
COACH OF THE YEARCindy Timchal Maryland
Players of the Week2/24 Jessica Bennett, Duke3/3 Sonia Judd, Maryland3/10 Alexis Venechanos, Maryland3/17 Kelly Coppedge, Maryland3/24 Katie Chrest, Duke3/31 Kelly Coppedge, Maryland4/7 Delia Cox, Maryland4/14 Kelly Coppedge, Maryland
Team StatisticsScoring GPGoals PG
Virginia 22 289 13.14
Maryland 22 18312.86Duke 18 214 11.89
North Carolina 16 133 8.31
Defense GP GA PG
Maryland 22 145 6.59Duke 18 126 7.00
Virginia 22 182 8.27
North Carolina 16 138 8.63
Indivdual StatisticsScoring GPGls-Ast Pts PG
Lauren Aumiller, Va. 22 64-36 100 4.55
Kelly Coppedge, Md. 22 73-22 95 4.32Amy Appelt, Va. 22 58-25 83 3.77
Cary Chasney, Va. 22 59-19 78 3.55
Sonia Judd, Md. 22 49-25 74 3.36Katie Chrest, Duke 18 39-15 54 3.00
Goals Scored GP Gls PG
Kelly Coppedge, Md. 22 73 3.32Lauren Aumiller, Virginia 22 64 2.91
Cary Chasney, Virginia 22 59 2.68
Amy Appelt, Virginia 22 58 2.64
Sonia Judd, Maryland 22 49 2.23Katie Chrest, Duke 18 39 2.17
Beth Ames, North Carolina 15 32 2.13
Kate Kaiser, Duke 18 38 2.11
Lauren Gallagher, Duke 18 37 2.01
Assists GPAsts PG
Lauren Aumiller, Virginia 22 36 1.64
Acacia Walker, Md. 22 33 1.50Amy Appelt, Virginia 22 25 1.14
Sonia Judd, Maryland 22 25 1.14Kelly Coppedge, Md. 22 22 1.00
Ground Balls GPGBs PG
Beth Ames, North Carolina 15 54 3.60
Meghan Miller, Duke 18 61 3.39
Delia Cox, Maryland 22 71 3.23Andy Fortino, N. Carolina 13 41 3.15
Jessica Bennett, Duke 18 54 3.00
Lauri Kenis, Virginia 22 66 3.00
Meghan Walters, Duke 18 51 2.83
Tiffany Schummer, Virginia 22 62 2.82
Caused Turnovers GP CT PG
Meghan Miller, Duke 18 43 2.39
Meghan Kelly, N. Carolina 16 38 2.38
Tiffany Schummer, Virginia 22 52 2.36
Andy Fortino, N. Carolina 13 29 2.23
Kate Kaiser, Duke 18 37 2.06
Lauri Kenis, Virginia 22 43 1.95
Meghan Walters, Duke 18 33 1.83
Draw Controls GP DC PG
Lauren Aumiller, Virginia 22 54 2.45
Beth Ames, North Carolina 15 32 2.13
Acacia Walker, Maryland22 42 1.91Cary Chasney, Virginia 22 39 1.77
Kelly Coppedge, Maryland22 37 1.68Meghan Walters, Duke 18 30 1.67
Sonia Judd, Maryland 22 36 1.64Kate Kaiser, Duke 18 29 1.61
Delia Cox, Maryland 22 35 1.59Katie Chrest, Duke 18 27 1.50
Tiffany Schummer, Virginia 22 33 1.50
Goals Against Avg. Mins GA GAA
Alexis Venechanos, Md. 1097 121 6.62Megan Huether, Duke 1036 120 6.95
Andrea Pfeiffer, Virginia 1290 172 8.00
Katelyn Hoffman, N.C. 552 76 8.26
Save Percentage Svs. GA Pct.
Alexis Venechanos, Md. 164 121 .575Megan Huether, Duke 132 120 .524
Andrea Pfeiffer, Virginia 148 172 .460
Katelyn Hoffman, N.C. 56 76 .424
Sonia Judd Julie Shank Alexis Venechanos
Kelly
Coppedge
Alexis
Venechanos
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 39
OPPONENT PROFILES • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
GENERAL INFOLocation: Providence, R.I.
Athletic Director: David T. Roach
President: E. Gordon Gee
Founded: 1764
Field (Cap.): Stevenson Field (3,500)
Conference: Ivy League
Colors: Seal Brown, Cardinal Red and
White
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Theresa Ingram
Alma Mater: Maryland, ‘94
Record at Brown (Yrs.): 23-32 (5)
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assistants: Colleen Christopher, Erin
Kutner
WLAX Office Phone: (401) 863-9378
2003 Record: 5-8
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 3-4/5th
2003 Postseason: None
Starters Returning/Lost: 9/3
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 21/5
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Jeanne
Carhart
Office Phone: (401) 863-1094
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (401) 863-1436
Website: www.brownbears.com
2004 SCHEDULE3/9 New Hampshire 3 p.m.
3/14 Colgate 1 p.m.
3/17 Boston College 3 p.m.
3/20 Maryland Noon
3/24 at Harvard 4 p.m.
3/31 at Monmouth 3:30 p.m.
4/4 Dartmouth 1 p.m.
4/9 at Columbia 7 p.m.
4/14 at Boston 4 p.m.
4/16 Cornell 5 p.m.
4/19 at Holy Cross 4 p.m.
4/21 at Yale 3 p.m.
4/25 at Penn 1 p.m.
4/28 Connecticut 7 p.m.
5/1 Princeton 1 p.m.
Recent Results3/15/03 at Maryland W, 15-5
3/16/02 at Brown W, 19-8
3/17/01 at Maryland W, 20-4
4/11/00 at Maryland W, 18-7
3/22/99 at Brown W, 18-13
4/11/98 at Brown W, 15-6
3/25/97 at Maryland W, 14-5
3/30/93 at Brown W, 16-2
BrownBearsMarch 13, Noon
Providence, R.I.Series: Md. leads, 10-0
GENERAL INFOLocation: Hanover, N.H
Athletic Director: Josie Harper
President: James Wright
Founded: 1769
Field (Cap.): Scully-Fahey Field
(2,000)
Conference: Ivy League
Colors: Dartmouth Green and White
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Amy Patton
Alma Mater: Maryland, ‘88
Record at Dartmouth (Yrs.): 122-49
(11)
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assts: Sarah Martin, Kristen Foster
WLAX Office Phone: (603) 646-3955
2003 Record:11-5
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: NCAA
Quarterfinals
2003 Postseason: 6-1/1st
Starters Returning/Lost: 10/2
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 20/8
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Kathy Slattery
Office Phone: (603) 646-2468
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (603) 646-1286
Website: athletics.dartmouth.edu
2004 SCHEDULE2/28 vs. New Hampshire 1 p.m.
3/6 James Madison Noon
3/20 at Stanford 1 p.m.
3/23 at Maryland 3 p.m.
3/27 Yale 1 p.m.
3/28 Columbia 1 p.m.
4/4 at Brown 1 p.m.
4/9 at Cornell 6 p.m.
4/11 at Syracuse 1 p.m.
4/17 Penn 1 p.m.
4/21 at Harvard 6 p.m.
4/24 at Princeton 1 p.m.
4/28 Boston 6 p.m.
5/6 Duke 6 p.m.
5/8 North Carolina 1 p.m.
Recent Results5/11/03 at Maryland1 W, 13-5
3/18/03 at Dartmouth W, 9-2
3/19/02 at Maryland W, 13-8
5/4/01 at Dartmouth W, 12-11
3/21/00 at Maryland W, 15-4
3/20/99 at Springfield W, 14-4
3/25/98 at Dartmouth W, 16-7
5/3/97 at Dartmouth W, 16-5
5/4/96 at Maryland W, 16-4
5/6/95 at Dartmouth W, 12-4
1-NCAA Tournament
DartmouthBig GreenMarch 23, 3 p.m.
College Park, Md.Series: Md. leads, 12-0
GENERAL INFOLocation: Denver, Colo.
Athletic Director: Dr. M. Dianne
Murphy
Chancellor: Daniel L. Ritchie
Founded: 1864
Field (Cap.): Pioneer (1,000)
Conference: Mountain Pacific
Lacrosse League
Colors: Crimson and Gold
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Cathy Nelson Reese
Alma Mater: Maryland, ‘98
Record at Denver (Yrs.): First Year
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assistants: Kinsley O’Garrow
WLAX Office Phone: (303) 871-4703
2003 Record: 8-6
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 2-2/3rd
2003 Postseason: MPLL Semifinals
Starters Returning/Lost: 9/3
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 14/6
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Josh
Waldman
Office Phone: (303) 871-7555
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (303) 871-3890
Website: www.denverpioneers.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/21 at St. Mary’s (Calif.) 2 p.m.
2/22 at California 2 p.m.
3/6 UC Davis 1 p.m.
3/14 vs. Davidson 11 a.m.
3/16 at Duquesne 2 p.m.
3/19 at Mount St. Mary’s 1:30 p.m.
3/21 at Delaware 10 a.m.
3/28 Stanford 1 p.m.
4/2 at Maryland 2 p.m.
4/3 vs. Bucknell 5 p.m.
4/14 Regis 7 p.m.
4/23 at Syracuse 11 a.m.
4/25 at St. Bonaventure 10 a.m.
4/28 Colorado College 7 p.m.
5/1 vs. Ohio Noon
5/2 at Northwestern Noon
5/6-8 MPSF Championships TBA
DenverPioneersApril 2, 4 p.m.
College Park, Md.Series: First Meeting
GENERAL INFOLocation: Durham, N.C.
Athletic Director: Joe Alleva
President: Dr. Nannerl Keohane
Founded: 1838
Field (Cap.): Koskinen Stadium
(7,000)
Conference: Atlantic Coast
Colors: Royal Blue and White
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Kerstin Kimel
Alma Mater: Maryland, ‘93
Record at Duke (Yrs.): 83-55 (9)
Overall Record (Yrs.): 87-62 (10)
Assts: Allison Valentino, Christine
Mastro, Samantha Sparks Ekstrand
WLAX Office Phone: (919) 668-5758
2003 Record: 13-5
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 2-1/2nd
2003 Postseason: NCAA First Round
Starters Returning/Lost: 9/3
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 13/7
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Matt Plizga
Office Phone: (919) 684-3328
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (919) 684-2489
Website: www.goduke.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/20 at UMBC 1 p.m.
2/22 Northwestern Noon
2/27 Maryland 7 p.m.
2/29 Johns Hopkins Noon
3/6 vs. Duquesne 1 p.m.
3/10 vs. Notre Dame Noon
3/13 at North Carolina 1 p.m.
3/17 at Princeton 7 p.m.
3/21 Georgetown Noon
3/28 Vanderbilt 1 p.m.
4/3 Virginia Noon
4/9 at Loyola (Md.) 4 p.m.
4/11 at Richmond 2 p.m.
4/16 Stanford 7 p.m.
4/23 ACC Semifinals TBA
4/25 ACC Finals TBA
5/6 at Dartmouth 6 p.m.
5/8 at Hofstra Noon
Recent Results3/18/03 at Maryland W, 9-8 (ot)
3/1/02 at Duke L, 8-9
3/2/01 at Maryland W, 18-11
4/22/01 at Orlando1 W, 7-6
3/3/00 at Duke W, 14-10
3/20/99 at Maryland W, 8-5
3/25/98 at Duke L, 6-10
4/19/97 at Virginia1 W, 14-4
3/9/97 at Maryland W, 13-2
1-ACC Tournament
DukeBlue DevilsFebruary 27, 7 p.m.
Durham, N.C.Series: Md. leads, 8-2
GENERAL INFOLocation: Fairfax, Va.
Athletic Director: Tom O’Connor
President: Dr. Alan G. Merten
Founded: 1957
Field (Cap.): George Mason Stadium
(5,000)
Conference: Colonial Athletic Asso-
ciation
Colors: Green and Gold
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Amy Umbach
Alma Mater: William & Mary, ’95)
Record at George Mason (Yrs.): 47-
50 (6)
Overall Record (Yrs.): 55-58 (7)
Assistants: Liz Schaffner, Kerry Miller,
Sarah Witkowski
WLAX Office Phone: (703) 993-3219
2003 Record: 9-8
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 4-3/T-3rd
2003 Postseason: CAA Semifinals
Starters Returning/Lost: 10/4
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 14/6
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Carlton
White
Office Phone: (703) 993-3246
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (703) 993-3259
Website: www.GMUSports.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/29 North Carolina 1 p.m.
3/17 at Johns Hopkins 5 p.m.
3/24 George Washington 7 p.m.
3/27 at Boston Noon
3/31 Loyola (Md.) 7 p.m.
4/2 Old Dominion 7 p.m.
4/4 at William & Mary Noon
4/9 at Towson 7 p.m.
4/11 at Delaware Noon
4/13 at Virginia 7 p.m.
4/16 Drexel 7 p.m.
4/18 Hofstra Noon
4/21 at James Madison 4 p.m.
4/24 Virginia Tech 1 p.m.
4/26 American 7 p.m.
5/1-2 CAA Tournament TBA
5/9 at Maryland Noon
Recent Results2/25/03 at Maryland W, 20-5
5/3/02 at Maryland W, 18-6
Geo. MasonPatriotsMay 9, Noon
College Park, Md.Series: Md. leads, 2-0
40 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • OPPONENT PROFILES
GENERAL INFOLocation: Washington, D.C.
Athletic Director: Joseph C. Lang
President: John D. DeGioia, Ph.D
Founded: 1789
Field (Cap.): Kehoe Field (2,500)
Conference: Big East
Colors: Blue and Gray
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Kim Simmons
Alma Mater: Princeton, ‘94
Record at Georgetown (Yrs.): 100-38 (8)
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assistants: Ricky Fried, Bowen
Holden, Erin Elbe
WLAX Office Phone: (202) 687-2420
2003 Record: 13-4
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 6-0/1st
2003 Postseason: NCAA Quarterfinals
Starters Returning/Lost: 8/4
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 16/7
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Renee
Constantinides
Office Phone: (202) 687-2492
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (202) 687-2491
Website: www.guhoyas.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/28 Cornell Noon
3/7 at Virginia Tech 1 p.m.
3/13 at Syracuse 1 p.m.
3/17 William & Mary 3:30 p.m.
3/21 at Duke 1 p.m.
3/26 Princeton 4 p.m.
3/28 Rutgers 1 p.m.
4/4 North Carolina 1 p.m.
4/7 at Maryland 7 p.m.
4/10 Boston College Noon
4/17 Notre Dame 1 p.m.
4/21 at Penn State 3 p.m.
4/24 Connecticut Noon
4/27 James Madison 4 p.m.
5/1 Stanford 1 p.m.
Recent Results2/25/03 at Georgetown W, 13-10
4/3/02 at Maryland L, 6-10
5/20/01 at Johns Hopkins1W, 14-13 (2ot)
4/12/01 at Georgetown W, 13-9
5/14/00 at Maryland2 W, 7-6 (ot)
4/13/00 at Maryland W, 16-6
5/8/99 at Maryland2 W, 17-6
4/14/99 at Georgetown W, 21-9
4/15/98 at Maryland W, 10-7
4/16/97 at Georgetown W, 15-10
3/23/96 at Maryland W, 17-1
1-NCAA Finals
2-NCAA Quarterfinals
GeorgetownHoyasApril 7, 7 p.m. (CSTV)
College Park, Md.Series: Md. leads, 12-1
GENERAL INFOLocation: Baltimore, Md.
Athletic Director: Tom Calder
President: Dr. William R. Brody
Founded: 1876
Field (Cap.): Homewood Field
(8,500)
Conference: American Lacrosse Con-
ference
Colors: Columbia Blue and Black
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Janine Tucker
Alma Mater: Loyola, ‘89
Record at Johns Hopkins (Yrs.): 122-
45 (10)
Overall Record (Yrs.): 122-45 (10)
Assistants: Lelli Cherry Swords, Tricia
Dabrowski
WLAX Office Phone: (410) 516-7479
2003 Record: 11-5
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 4-2
2003 Postseason: None
Starters Returning/Lost: 8/4
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 22/4
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Kevin Tritt
Office Phone: (410) 516-0638
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (410) 516-7482
Website: www.HopkinsSports.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/27 at Davidson 4 p.m.
2/29 at Duke Noon
3/4 at Geo. Washington 3:30 p.m.
3/9 Towson 7 p.m.
3/12 Ohio 4 p.m.
3/14 Ohio State Noon
3/17 George Mason 5 p.m.
3/21 Boston Noon
3/24 American 4 p.m.
3/30 at Penn 7 p.m.
4/4 Vanderbilt 1 p.m.
4/10 Maryland 1 p.m.
4/14 Villanova 7 p.m.
4/23 at Notre Dame 7 p.m.
4/25 at Northwestern 1 p.m.
5/1 at Penn State 1 p.m.
Recent Results4/12/03 at Maryland W, 19-4
4/13/02 at Johns Hopkins W, 13-8
4/14/01 at Maryland W, 24-5
4/15/00 at Johns Hopkins W, 16-3
J. HopkinsBlue JaysApril 10, 5 p.m.
Baltimore, Md.Series: Md. leads, 5-0
GENERAL INFOLocation: Baltimore, Md.
Athletic Director: Joseph Boylan
President: Rev. Harold E. Ridley, S.J.
Founded: 1852
Field (Cap.): Curley Field (3,000)
Conference: Independent
Colors: Green and Grey
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Kerri Johnson
Alma Mater: Loyola, ‘97
Record at Loyola (Yrs.): First Season
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assistants: Krystin Porcella, Stacey
Morland, Marianne Gioffre
WLAX Office Phone: (410) 617-2167
2003 Record: 17-2
2003 Conf. Record/Finish:
2003 Postseason: NCAA Semifinals
Starters Returning/Lost: 8/4
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 21/13
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Sara Day
Office Phone: (410) 617-2337
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (410) 617-5029
Website: www.loyolagreyhounds.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/28 at Penn 1 p.m.
3/2 at UMBC 4 p.m.
3/5 at North Carolina 3:30 p.m.
3/7 Princeton 2 p.m.
3/12 Delaware 4 p.m.
3/14 at Hofstra 1 p.m.
3/19 Boston 3:30 p.m.
3/21 Towson 1 p.m.
3/26 James Madison 4 p.m.
3/28 at William & Mary Noon
3/31 at George Mason 7 p.m.
4/3 at Penn State 3 p.m.
4/9 Duke 4 p.m.
4/17 at Virginia 7 p.m.
4/24 at Stanford 1 p.m.
5/1 Maryland 3 p.m.
5/8 Syracuse 3 p.m.
Recent Results5/3/03 at Maryland L, 8-9
4/3/02 at Maryland L, 6-10
4/28/01 at Maryland W, 16-12
5/19/00 at Trenton1 W, 17-7
4/29/00 at Loyola W, 12-4
5/1/99 at Maryland W, 17-9
5/3/98 at Loyola W, 13-9
5/18/97 at Bethlehem2 W, 8-7
4/22/97 at Maryland L, 6-7
4/23/96 at Loyola W, 9-6
4/25/95 at Maryland W, 13-4
1-NCAA Finals
2-NCAA Semifinals
LoyolaGreyhoundsMay 1, 3 p.m.
Baltimore, Md.Series: Md. leads, 21-3
GENERAL INFOLocation: Chapel Hill, N.C.
Athletic Director: Dick Baddour
Chancellor: James Moeser
Founded: 1776
Field (Cap.): Henry Stadium (1,086)
Conference: Atlantic Coast
Colors: Carolina Blue & White
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Jenny Levy
Alma Mater: Virginia, ‘92
Record at N. Carolina (Yrs.): 96-43 (8)
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assistants: Alvian Coates, Claudia
Middleton
WLAX Office Phone: (919) 962-0740
2003 Record: 7-9
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 0-3/4th
2003 Postseason:
Starters Returning/Lost: 9/3
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 16/4
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Matt Bowers
Office Phone: (919) 962-2123
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (919) 962-0612
Website: www.tarheelblue.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/27 at UMBC 1 p.m.2/29 at George Mason 1 p.m.3/5 Loyola 3:30 p.m.3/7 Ohio 1 p.m.3/10 Connecticut 1 p.m.3/13 Duke 1 p.m.3/20 at Virginia 1 p.m.3/26 Ohio State 7 p.m.3/28 Penn State 3 p.m.4/2 at Temple TBA4/4 at Georgetown 1 p.m.4/9 Vanderbilt 6 p.m.4/13 at Old Dominion 3 p.m.4/17 Maryland 1 p.m.4/23 ACC Tournament TBA4/25 ACC Tournament TBA5/8 at Dartmouth Noon
Recent Results4/18/03 at Virginia1 W, 13-5
3/2/03 at Maryland W, 10-8
3/3/02 at North Carolina L, 11-13
4/21/02 at Durham1 L, 10-11
3/4/01 at Maryland W, 8-7
4/23/00 at Maryland1 W, 17-6
3/5/00 at North Carolina W, 24-11
4/24/99 at N. Carolina1 W, 19-17 (ot)
3/7/99 at Maryland W, 13-7
5/15/98 at Baltimore2 W, 14-9
4/18/98 at Virginia1 L, 10-12
3/8/98 at North Carolina L, 9-10
1-ACC Tournament
2-NCAA Semifinals
N. CarolinaTar HeelsFebruary 27, 7 p.m.
Durham, N.C.Series: Md. leads, 9-5
GENERAL INFOLocation: Columbus, Ohio
Athletic Director: Andy Geiger
President: Karen A. Holbrook
Founded: 1870
Field (Cap.): Jesse Owens Memorial
Stadium (8,000)
Conference: American Lacrosse Con-
ference
Colors: Scarlet and Gray
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Sue Stimmel
Alma Mater: Temple, ‘84
Record at Ohio State (Yrs.) 68-50 (8)
Overall Record (Yrs.): 144-68 (14)
Assistants: Michael Scerbo, Megan
Mirick
WLAX Office Phone: (614) 688-4178
2003 Record: 14-4
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 14/5
2003 Postseason: NCAA Quarterfinals
Starters Returning/Lost: 7/5
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 14/5
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: D.C. Koehl
Office Phone: (614) 292-4056
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (614) 292-8547
Website: www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/27 at Stanford 7 p.m.
2/29 at California 1 p.m.
3/7 Northwestern 1 p.m.
3/14 at Johns Hopkins Noon
3/20 Richmond Noon
3/23 vs. Cornell 1 p.m.
3/26 vs. North Carolina 7 p.m.
3/28 vs. Maryland 1 p.m.
4/2 at Virginia Tech 4 p.m.
4/4 Davidson 1 p.m.
4/10 Notre Dame 1 p.m.
4/18 at Vanderbilt 1 p.m.
4/23 Penn State 7 p.m.
4/25 Lafayette 11 a.m.
4/28 Duquesne 6 p.m.
5/5 at Ohio 4 p.m.
Recent Results3/30/03 at Ohio State1 W, 10-5
3/31/02 at Maryland1 L, 11-12
4/1/01 at Penn State1 W, 14-8
1-ACC/American Lacrosse Conference
Challenge
Ohio StateBuckeyesMarch 28, 2 p.m.
Chapel Hill, N.C.Series: Md. leads, 2-1
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 41
OPPONENT PROFILES • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
GENERAL INFOLocation: Norfolk, Va.
Athletic Director: Dr. Jim Jarrett
President: Rosanne Runte
Founded: 1930
Field (Cap.): Foreman Field (20,000)
Conference: Colonial Athletic Asso-
ciation
Colors: Slate Blue, Black and Silver
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Sue Stahl
Alma Mater: Ursinis, ‘66
Record at Old Dominion (Yrs.): 100-
106 (13)
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assts: Heather Holt, Danielle Hensil
WLAX Office Phone: (757) 683-4541
2003 Record: 12-4
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 7-0/1st
2003 Postseason: CAA Tournament
Finals
Starters Returning/Lost: 9/3
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 18/4
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Kimberly
Zinkovich
Office Phone: (757) 683-3372
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (757) 683-3119
Website: www.odusports.com
2004 SCHEDULE3/6 at American Noon
3/13 UMBC 1 p.m.
3/17 Richmond 4 p.m.
3/20 at Maryland TBA
3/26 Temple 3 p.m.
3/28 Lafayette 1 p.m.
4/2 at George Mason 7 p.m.
4/4 James Madison 1 p.m.
4/7 at Virginia 7 p.m.
4/9 at Hofstra 1 p.m.
4/11 at Drexel 1 p.m.
4/13 North Carolina 3 p.m.
4/16 Delaware 3 p.m.
4/18 Towson 1 p.m.
4/21 at William & Mary 7 p.m.
4/27 at Rutgers 3 p.m.
5/1-2 CAA Tournament TBA
Recent Results3/22/03 at Old Dominion W, 16-5
3/23/02 at Maryland W, 17-9
3/24/01 at Old Dominion W, 13-8
3/25/00 at Maryland W, 21-4
3/27/99 at Old Dominion W, 18-9
3/28/98 at Maryland W, 18-1
3/29/97 at Old Dominion W, 17-1
3/30/96 at Maryland W, 19-4
4/1/95 at Old Dominion W, 16-2
Old DominionMonarchsMarch 20, 1 p.m.
College Park, Md.Series: Md. leads, 21-0
GENERAL INFOLocation: University Park, Pa.
Athletic Director: Tim Curley
President: Dr. Graham Spanier
Founded: 1855
Field (Cap.): Jeffrey Field (3,500)
Conference: American Lacrosse
Colors: Blue and White
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Suzanne Isidor
Alma Mater: Penn State, ‘95
Record at Penn State (Yrs.): 25-27 (3)
Overall Record (Yrs.): 81-42 (7)
Assistants: Tara Hohenshelt, Andrea
Hanley
WLAX Office Phone: (814) 863-7470
2003 Record: 9-8
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 5-1/t-1st
2003 Postseason: None
Starters Returning/Lost: 9/3
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 22/3
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Jen Armson
Office Phone: (814) 865-1757
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (814) 863-3165
Website: www.GoPSUsports.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/29 at Vanderbilt Noon
3/6 Davidson 1 p.m.
3/9 at James Madison Noon
3/12 Virginia 4 p.m.
3/14 William & Mary Noon
3/20 Princeton 1 p.m.
3/23 at Temple 3 p.m.
3/26 vs. Maryland 5 p.m.
3/28 at North Carolina 2 p.m.
4/3 Loyola 3 p.m.
4/7 at Penn 7 p.m.
4/10 Northwestern Noon
4/21 Georgetown 4 p.m.
4/23 at Ohio State 7 p.m.
4/25 at Ohio Noon
5/1 Johns Hopkins 1 p.m.
5/8 at Delaware 1 p.m.
Recent Results3/28/03 at Columbus3 W, 11-10
3/29/02 at Maryland3 W, 13-11
3/30/01 at Penn State W, 14-8
3/9/00 at Maryland W, 19-4
5/14/99 at Baltimore2 W, 17-13
3/2/99 at Penn State W, 12-8
4/25/98 at Penn State W, 14-10
5/10/97 at Maryland1 W, 6-2
4/26/97 at Penn State W, 12-11
1-NCAA Quarterfinals
2-NCAA Semifinals
3- ACC/American Lacrosse Conf. Challenge
Penn StateNittany LionsMarch 26, 5 p.m.
Chapel Hill, N.C.Series: Md. leads, 24-13-1
GENERAL INFOLocation: Princeton, N.J.
Athletic Director: Gary D. Walters
President: Shirley Tilghman
Founded: 1746
Field (Cap.): Class of 1952 Stadium
(4,500)
Conference: Ivy League
Colors: Orange and Black
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Chris Sailer
Alma Mater: Harvard, ‘81
Record at Denver (Yrs.): 215-72 (17)
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assistants: Keely McDonald, Alison
Fisher, Patty Kennedy
WLAX Office Phone: (609) 258-6489
2003 Record: 16-4
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 6-1/t-1st
2003 Postseason: NCAA Champions
Starters Returning/Lost: 7/5
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 20/8
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: David Rosenfeld
Office Phone: (609) 258-3153
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (609) 258-2399
Website: www.GoPrincetonTigers.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/28 at Lafayette 7 p.m.3/7 at Loyola 2 p.m.3/14 Virginia 1 p.m.3/17 Duke 7 p.m.3/20 at Penn State 1 p.m.3/24 at Columbia 7 p.m.3/26 at Georgetown 3:30 p.m.3/30 Delaware 7:30 p.m.4/3 Cornell Noon4/7 at Temple 4 p.m.4/10 Yale 3 p.m.4/14 Penn 7:30 p.m.4/17 at Harvard 1 p.m.4/24 Dartmouth 3 p.m.4/28 Maryland 7:30 p.m.5/1 at Brown 1 p.m.
Recent Results4/20/03 at Maryland L, 6-13
4/24/02 at Princeton L, 13-9
5/18/01 at Baltimore1 W, 14-7
4/25/01 at Maryland W, 7-6
5/21/00 at Trenton2 W, 16-8
4/26/00 at Princeton W, 14-7
4/28/99 at Maryland W, 8-7 (2OT)
4/29/99 at Princeton W, 12-11
4/30/97 at Maryland W, 14-8
5/18/96 at Bethlehem1 W, 6-5
5/1/96 at Princeton W, 14-7
1-NCAA Semifinals
2-NCAA Finals
PrincetonTigersApril 28, 7:30 p.m.
Princeton, N.J.Series: Md. leads, 17-5
GENERAL INFOLocation: Richmond, Va.
Athletic Director: Jim Miller
President: Dr. William E. Cooper
Founded: 1830
Field (Cap.): Lacrosse Field
Conference: Atlantic 10
Colors: Red and Blue
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Sue Murphy
Alma Mater: Massachusetts, ‘90
Record at Richmond (Yrs.): 22-13 (2)
Overall Record (Yrs.): 77-61 (9)
Assistants: Barb DiArcangelo
WLAX Office Phone: (804) 287-6680
2003 Record: 10-7
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 5-2/Third
2003 Postseason:
Starters Returning/Lost: 6/6
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 17/7
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Lynn Busby
Office Phone: (804) 287-6312
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (804) 289-8820
Website: www.richmondspiders.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/21 at Maryland 2 p.m.
3/5 Virginia 3:30 p.m.
3/7 UC Berkeley 1 p.m.
3/10 William & Mary 3:30 p.m.
3/17 at Old Dominion 4 p.m.
3/20 at Ohio State Noon
3/26 at Towson 7 p.m.
3/28 at La Salle Noon
4/2 at G. Washington 3:30 p.m.
4/6 American 3:30 p.m.
4/9 Massachusetts 3 p.m.
4/11 Duke 2 p.m.
4/16 at St. Bonaventure 4 p.m.
4/18 at Duquesne 1 p.m.
4/25 Temple Noon
5/2 Saint Joseph’s Noon
Recent Results4/14/92 at Maryland W, 17-0
3/8/91 at Richmond W, 15-4
3/28/90 at Maryland W, 17-5
RichmondSpidersFebruary 21, 2 p.m.
College Park, Md.Series: Md. leads, 10-0
GENERAL INFOLocation: Hamden, Conn.
Athletic Director: Jack MdDonald
President: Dr. John L. Lahey
Founded: 1929
Field (Cap.): Bobcats Field (1,000)
Conference: Northeast
Colors: Navy and Gold
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Stephania Samaras
Alma Mater: Virginia, ’00
Record at Quinnipiac (Yrs.): 8-8 (1)
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assistants:
WLAX Office Phone: (203) 582-5323
2003 Record: 8-8
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 4-4/5th
2003 Postseason: None
Starters Returning/Lost: 11/1
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 20/3
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Michael
Kobylanski
Office Phone: (203) 582-8625
E-mail:
Fax: (203) 582-8716
Website:
www.quinnipiacbobcats.com
2004 SCHEDULE3/3 at Holy Cross 3:30 p.m.
3/7 vs. Longwood 1 p.m.
3/11 at Maryland 3 p.m.
3/13 Harvard 1 p.m.
3/17 Connecticut 3 p.m.
3/20 Marist 1 p.m.
3/23 at Albany 3 p.m.
3/28 at St. Francis (Pa.) Noon
3/30 at Vermont 4 p.m.
4/2 Mount St. Mary’s 3 p.m.
4/6 at Central Conn 3 p.m.
4/10 Long Island 1 p.m.
4/16 at Sacred Heart 4 p.m.
4/18 Binghamton 2 p.m.
4/23 at Monmouth 3:30 p.m.
4/25 at Wagner 1 p.m.
4/30 NEC Tournament TBA
5/2 NEC Tournament TBA
QuinnipiacBobcatsMarch 11, 3 p.m.
College Park, Md.Series: First Meeting
42 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • OPPONENT PROFILES
GENERAL INFOLocation: Syracuse, N.Y.
Athletic Director: Jake Crouthamel
Chancellor: Kenneth A. Shaw
Founded: 1870
Field (Cap.): Carrier Dome (49,550)
Conference: BIG EAST
Colors: Orange
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Lisa Miller
Alma Mater: William & Mary, ‘87
Record at Syracuse (Yrs.): 63-29 (6)
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assistants: Amy Zimmer, Stacey
Brown
WLAX Office Phone: (315) 443-4258
2003 Record: 10-6
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 5-1/2nd
2003 Postseason: NCAA First Round
Starters Returning/Lost: 8/4
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 16/9
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Mike
Morrison
Office Phone: (315) 443-1330
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (315) 443-2076
Website: www.suathletics.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/28 at Virginia Noon
3/3 Maryland 7 p.m.
3/13 Georgetown 1 p.m.
3/19 Massachusetts 5 p.m.
3/23 California 7 p.m.
3/27 Connecticut 2:30 p.m.
3/30 Colgate 4 p.m.
4/3 at Rutgers 1 p.m.
4/9 Virginia Tech 2 p.m.
4/11 Dartmouth 2 p.m.
4/18 at Boston College 1 p.m.
4/23 Denver 1 p.m.
4/27 at Cornell 7 p.m.
5/1 at Notre Dame 1 p.m.
5/8 at Loyola 3 p.m.
Recent Results3/8/03 at Maryland W, 8-7
3/10/02 at Syracuse W, 15-11
3/10/01 at Maryland W, 11-7
3/12/00 at Syracuse W, 24-11
3/13/99 at Maryland W, 18-8
3/14/98 at Maryland W, 21-7
SyracuseOrangewomenMarch 3, TBA
Syracuse, N.Y.Series: Md. leads, 6-0
GENERAL INFOLocation: Charlottesville, Va.
Athletic Director: Craig Littlepage
President: John T. Casteen III
Founded: 1819
Field (Cap.): Klockner Stadium
(8,000)
Conference: Atlantic Coast
Colors: Orange and Blue
TEAM INFOHead Coach: Julie Myers
Alma Mater: Virginia, ‘90
Record at Virginia (Yrs.): 116-35 (7)
Overall Record (Yrs.): Same
Assts: Colleen Shearer, Heather Dow
WLAX Office Phone: (434) 982-5061
2003 Record: 17-4
2003 Conf. Record/Finish: 1-2, third
2003 Postseason: NCAA Finalists
Starters Returning/Lost: 8/4
Letterwinners Returning/Lost: 22/6
MEDIA INFOWomen’s Lacrosse SID: Chip Rogers
Office Phone: (434) 982-5977
E-mail: [email protected]
Fax: (434) 982-5525
Website: www.virginiasports.com
2004 SCHEDULE2/22 at Vanderbilt Noon2/28 Syracuse Noon3/5 at Richmond 3:30 p.m.3/9 at Maryland 7 p.m.3/12 at Penn State 4 p.m.3/14 at Princeton 1 p.m.3/20 North Carolina 1 p.m.3/23 UMBC 7 p.m.3/25 William & Mary 7 p.m.3/27 Temple 1 p.m.3/31 James Madison 7 p.m.4/3 at Duke Noon4/7 Old Dominion 7 p.m.4/13 George Mason 7 p.m.4/17 Loyola 7 p.m.4/19 at Virginia Tech 5 p.m.4/23 ACC Tournament TBA4/25 ACC Tournament TBA
Recent Results5/16/03 at Maryland2 L, 8-94/20/03 at Virginia1 W, 11-63/11/03 at Virginia W, 11-84/19/02 at Durham1 W, 15-123/12/02 at Maryland L, 17-164/20/01 at Orlando1 W, 7-63/13/01 at Virginia W, 8-74/22/00 at Maryland1 W, 8-63/14/00 at Maryland W, 17-85/16/99 at Baltimore3 W, 16-61-ACC Tournament2-NCAA Semifinals3-NCAA Finals
VirginiaCavaliersMarch 9, 7 p.m.
College Park, Md.Series: Md. leads, 20-9
All-Time Series ResultsOpponent Rec. Pct.
Anne Arundel 1-0 1.000
Brown 10-0 1.000
Cornell 0-1 .000
Dartmouth 12-0 1.000
Delaware 15-4-1 .775
Duke 8-2 .800
East Stroudsburg 1-0 1.000
Essex Comm. College 6-0 1.000
Frostburg 3-0 1.000
George Mason 2-0 1.000
Georgetown 12-1 .923
Harvard 18-7 .720
James Madison 36-4 .900
Johns Hopkins 5-0 1.000
Lehigh 1-0 1.000
Loyola 23-3 .885
Mary Washington 2-1 .667
Massachusetts 5-0 1.000
Millersville 2-2 .500
Monmouth 1-0 1.000
New Hampshire 5-1 .833
North Carolina 9-5 .643
Opponent Rec. Pct.
Northwestern 6-2 .750
Ohio State 2-1 .667
Old Dominion 21-0 1.000
Penn State 24-13-1 .645
Pennsylvania 13-1 .929
Princeton 17-5 .773
Richmond 10-0 1.000
Salisbury 7-0 1.000
Syracuse 6-0 1.000
Temple 15-10-1 .596
Towson 27-6 .818
UMBC 7-0 1.000
Ursinus 5-6 .454
Vanderbilt 2-0 1.000
Vermont 1-0 1.000
Virginia 29-9 .763
Virginia Tech 1-0 1.000
West Chester 13-5 .722
William & Mary 20-6 .769
Wilson 2-0 1.000
Yale 1-1 .500
2004 ACC Championship Informationhosted by University of North CarolinaHenry Stadium
Chapel Hill, N.C.
Friday 1 pm – seed #1 vs. seed #4
Friday 3:30–— seed #2 vs. seed #3
Sunday 12:30 – championship game
TV = Comcast, Sunshine, Fox Sports Net South (Championship only)
For tickets, call: (800) 722-4335 or (919) 962-2296
2004 ACC Tournament
2004 NCAA TournamentPrinceton University will host the 23rd annual NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship, May
21-23, 2004. The semifinals and championship games of the 16-team NCAA Tournament will be held at the
Class of ‘52 Stadium in Princeton, New Jersey. Tickets for the 2004 NCAA Division I women's lacrosse champi-
onships are now on sale. Princeton University is hosting the women's semifinals and final, May 21-23.
For tickets, call the Athletic Ticket Office at (609) 258-3538 Monday
through Thursday between the hours of 9:00 am and 4:00 pm, and on Fri-
day, 10am-2pm. They accept Visa, Mastercard, and American Express.
Eight first-round games will be conducted May 13, and four quarterfinal
games will be played May 16. Winners of the four quarterfinal games will
advance to the semifinals and finals May 21-23. All games, except the semi-
finals and finals, will be played on the campuses of competing institutions.
The first game of the NCAA semifinal round will be held May 21 at 6:30 p.m.
with the second game to follow at 8:00 p.m. The championship game will be held on Sunday, May 23 at 1 p.m.
The title game will be broadcast live on CSTV (College Sports Television)
2004 NCAA Tournament ActionMay 13, 2004 • First Round at Campus Sites
May 16, 2004 • Quarterfinals at Campus Sites
May 21, 2004 • Semifinals at Class of ‘52 Stadium (Princeton, N.J.), 6:30 p.m. & 8:30 p.m.
May 23, 2004 • Championship at Class of ‘52 Stadium (Princeton, N.J.), 1 p.m.
For Tickets call 609-258-3538
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 43
ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
Year-By-Year ResultsYear Overall Pct. ACC Pct. Finish Coach Post-Season Finish
1974 7-4 .636 Sue Tyler1975 6-8 .429 Margarite Arrighi1976 5-7 .417 Sue Tyler1977 11-2 .846 Sue Tyler1978 12-2-1 .833 Sue Tyler AIAW National Runner-Up1979 10-6 .625 Sue Tyler AIAW Tournament1980 16-1 .941 Sue Tyler AIAW Tournament1981 12-3 .800 Sue Tyler AIAW National Champions1982 12-6 .667 Sue Tyler AIAW National Runner-up1983 11-3-1 .767 Sue Tyler NCAA Quarterfinalists1984 16-1-1 .917 Sue Tyler NCAA Runners-Up1985 15-2 .882 Sue Tyler NCAA Runners-Up1986 15-4 .789 Sue Tyler NCAA Champions1987 12-5 .706 Sue Tyler NCAA Quarterfinalists1988 11-7 .611 Sue Tyler1989 10-6 .625 Sue Tyler1990 16-2 .889 Sue Tyler NCAA Runners-Up1991 14-3 .824 Cindy Timchal NCAA Runners-Up1992 14-1 .933 Cindy Timchal NCAA Champions1993 12-2 .857 Cindy Timchal NCAA Semifinalists1994 12-1 .923 Cindy Timchal NCAA Runners-Up1995 17-0 1.000 Cindy Timchal NCAA Champions1996 19-0 1.000 Cindy Timchal NCAA Champions1997 21-1 .954 3-0 1.000 1st Cindy Timchal NCAA Champions1998 18-3 .857 1-2 .333 T-2nd Cindy Timchal NCAA Champions1999 21-0 1.000 3-0 1.000 1st Cindy Timchal NCAA Champions2000 21-1 .954 2-1 .667 2nd Cindy Timchal NCAA Champions2001 23-0 1.000 3-0 1.000 1st Cindy Timchal NCAA Champions2002 11-10 .524 0-3 .000 4th Cindy Timchal NCAA Quarterfinals
2003 18-4 .818 3-0 1.000 1st Cindy Timchal NCAA Semifinalists
Totals 422-95-3 .814 15-6 .714 3 coaches 24 appearances/10 national titles
Coaching History
Margarite
Arrighi1 season
(1975)
6-8, .429
Sue Tyler16 seasons
(1974, 1976-1990)
195-61-3, .759
2 Nat’l Championships
Cindy Timchal13 seasons
(1991-present)
221-26, .895
8 NCAA Championships
Postseason History1978 – National Runners-UpQuarterfinal – Maryland d. Yale, 7-6 (ot)
Semifinal – Maryland d. East Stroudsburg, 5-4
Championship – Penn State d. Maryland, 9-3
1979 – QuarterfinalsQuarterfinal – William & Mary d. Maryland, 6-5
1980 – National Runners-UpQuarterfinal – Maryland d. N. Hampshire, 6-1
Semifinal – Maryland d. Pennsylvania, 5-4
Championship – Penn State d. Maryland, 3-1
1981 – National ChampionsQuarterfinal – Maryland d. Penn State, 12-8
Semifinal – Maryland d. Harvard, 5-3
Championship – Maryland d. Ursinus, 5-4
1982 – National Runners-UpQuarterfinal – Maryland d. William & Mary, 7-3
Semifinal – Maryland d. Pennsylvania, 7-5
Championship – Temple d. Maryland, 3-2
1983 – QuarterfinalsQuarterfinal – Delaware d. Maryland, 11-8
1984 – National Runners-UpQuarterfinal – Maryland d. Lehigh, 12-6
Semifinal – Maryland d. Massachusetts, 9-3
Championship – Temple d. Maryland, 6-4
1985 – National Runners-UpQuarterfinal – Maryland d. Loyola, 17-6
Semifinal – Maryland d. Penn State, 12-11
Championship – New Hampshire d. Maryland, 6-5
1986 – National ChampionsQuarterfinal – Maryland d. Northwestern, 11-7
Semifinal – Maryland d. Virginia, 12-7
Championship – Maryland d. Penn State, 11-10
1987 – QuarterfinalsQuarterfinal – Virginia d. Maryland, 10-5
1990 – National Runners-UpSemifinal – Maryland d. Loyola, 10-5
Championship – Harvard d. Maryland, 8-7
1991 – National Runners-UpSemifinal – Maryland d. N. Hampshire, 4-3 (ot)
Championship – Virginia d. Maryland, 8-6
1992 – National ChampionsSemifinal – Maryland d. Virginia, 8-7 (ot)
Championship – Maryland d. Harvard, 11-10 (ot)
1993 – SemifinalsSemifinal – Princeton d. Maryland, 7-6
1994 – National Runners-UpSemifinal – Maryland d. Loyola, 19-4
Championship – Princeton d. Maryland, 10-7
1995 – National ChampionsSemifinal – Maryland d. Penn State, 12-7Championship – Maryland d. Princeton, 13-5
1996 – National ChampionsSemifinal – Maryland d. Princeton, 6-5
Championship – Maryland d. Virginia, 10-5
1997 – National ChampionsQuarterfinal – Maryland d. Penn State, 6-2
Semifinal – Maryland d. Temple, 9-6
Championship – Maryland d. Loyola, 8-7
1998 – National ChampionsQuarterfinal – Maryland d. James Madison, 13-8
Semifinal – Maryland d. North Carolina, 14-9
Championship – Maryland def. Virginia, 11-5
1999 – National ChampionsQuarterfinal – Maryland d. Georgetown, 17-6
Semifinal – Maryland d. Penn State, 17-13
Championship – Maryland d. Virginia, 16-6
2000 – National ChampionsQuarterfinal – Maryland d. Georgetown, 7-6 (ot)
Semifinal – Maryland d. Loyola, 17-6
Championship – Maryland d. Princeton, 16-8
2001 – National ChampionsFirst Round — Maryland d. Monmouth, 23-9
Quarterfinal – Maryland d. James Madison, 11-9
Semifinal – Maryland d. Princeton, 14-7
Championship – Maryland d. Georgetown, 14-13 (2ot)
2002 – QuarterfinalsFirst Round — Maryland d. Loyola, 13-8
Quarterfinal – Cornell d. Maryland, 14-4
2003 – SemifinalistsFirst Round – Maryland d. Temple, 26-6Quarterfinal – Maryland d. Dartmouth, 13-5Semifinal – Virginia d. Maryland, 9-8
44 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK
All-Time Terp Greats
JEN ADAMS (1998-2001)All-time collegiate scoring leader with 445 points… also the all-
time assist leader with 178… owns Maryland’s career and single
season records for points, goals, and assists… a member of
four national championship teams… named All-Ameri-
can and national player of the year three times…
scored more goals and assists in 2001 than any
player in NCAA Division I… member of the
Australian National Team.
KELLY AMONTE-HILLER (1993-96)Second on all-time collegiate assists chart with
132… seventh on all-time collegiate points list…
ranks second on Maryland’s career goals, as-
sists, and points charts… a four time
All-American honoree… 1996
National D-1 most valuable
player and National Offensive
Player of the Year… 1995 Na-
tional Defensive Player of the Year… 1996 ACC Female Ath-
lete of the Year… current member of U.S. World Cup
Team… current head coach of Northwestern Univer-
sity.
JAMIE BRODSKY (1992, 94-96)Two time All-American… recorded 325 career saves… owns a .664
career save percentage… member of three National Championship
teams… member of U.S. National Team.
ERIN BROWN (1989-90)Scored 27 goals and 37 points in two seasons… 1990 All-American hon-
oree… current member of U.S. World Cup
Team… member of U.S. National Team …
member of the 1997 and 2001 U.S. World
Cup teams, each of which emerged victorious
… current women’s director for U.S. Lacrosse.
QUINN CARNEY (1998-2001)Named 2001 ACC Tournament MVP… two time All-American
and All-ACC honors… member of four straight national cham-
pionship teams… ranks in the top five in assists, goals, and
points on Maryland’s all-time career charts… current mem-
ber of World Cup Team… assistant coach at Stanford University.
ALISON COMITO (1998-2001)Third on Maryland’s all-time career goals chart…. among the top 5 in
Maryland’s career assists and points charts… two time All-American…
three time All-ACC selection… named to the 2001 STX South All-Star
Team… member of four consecutive NCAA Championship teams.
The 2002-2003 athletics year was a special one in Atlantic Coast Conference history as the league marked its 50th
anniversary. As part of the golden celebration, the conference named all-time teams from each of the sports it sponsors.
The ACC has a short but rich history in women’s lacrosse as over half (11) of the 21 NCAA championships have been won
by current ACC schools – with nine of those being won by Maryland. Needless to say, when the list of the ACC’s 55 all-time
best players was released at the end of 2002, it was dotted with Terrapins. Sixty percent of the team – or a total of 33
players – were from the University of Maryland, a reflection as strong as any of the tradition that is Maryland lacrosse.
LIZ DOWNING (1993-1996)Named 1996 USWLA D-1 National Defensive Player of the Year… three
year member of U.S. Women’s Lacrosse Elite team… named two time
All-American… head field hockey and women’s lacrosse coach at SUNY-
Geneseo.
BETSY ELDER (1991-94)In the top 10 on Maryland’s career goals and points charts…
named All-American three times… named National Offensive
Player of the Year in 1994… led the 1993 NCAA semifinalists team
with 54 goals…a member of the 1992 National Championship
team… produced 158 goals, 41 assists and 199 points in her Mary-
land career.
ANYSIA FEDEC (1984-87)Member of the 1986 NCAA National Championship
team… named All-American two times… fifth on all-
time career goals chart… sixth in all-time career points
and assists… recorded 157 goals, 83 assists… and 240
points… named to the 1986 All-Tournament team.
SARAH FORBES (1994-97)A three time All-American from 1995-1997… named 1997 National Offen-
sive Player of the Year… led Maryland in goals (59), assists (36), and points
(94) in 1997… named 1997 ACC Female Athlete of the Year… ranks 12th
on Maryland’s career assists chart… tied with four others for Maryland’s
single game assist record… a member of the Australian National Team.
LEIGH FRENDBURG (1990-92)Two time All-American… scored career marks of 105 goals,
42 assists, 129 points… member of 1992 National Cham-
pionship team.
LAURA HARMON SCHUMANN (1992-95)Named an All-American three times… seventh on Maryland’s all-
time scoring list… among the top 15 in career points scored at
Maryland… recorded 150 goals, 34 assists, and 184 points in her
four years as at Maryland… a member of the U.S. National Team
… member of the 1997 U.S. World Cup Championship team.
MANDY HUDSON STEVENSON(1989, 91-93)Named 1993 National Goalkeeper of the
Year… recorded .602 career save per-
centage and notched 368 saves… member of 1991
and 1992 NCAA All-Tournament teams… two time All-American…
member of 1992 National Championship team.
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 45
ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
CHRISTIE JENKINS (1997-2000)Three time All-American honoree… ranks in the Top 10 in
Maryland’s all-time career goals, points, and assists… mem-
ber of four straight national championship teams… 2000
ACC All-Tournament team… 2000 all-ACC selection…
among Maryland’s Top 10 in single-season assists, goals, and
points… member of U.S. National Team.
ALEX KAHOE (1997-2000)Named 2000 National Goalkeeper of the Year… Three time All-American hon-
oree… four consecutive national championship teams… 2000 ACC All-Tour-
nament team… 2000 All-ACC selection… .629 career save percentage…
928 career saves including 221 in 2000… member of U.S. National Team.
MARY KONDNER (1987-90)Named 1990 National Defensive Player of the Year…
member of 1990 All-American team… named to the 1990 All-Tourna-
ment team… recorded 31 goals and 45 career points as a defender.
SANDY LANAHAN (1979-81)Played on the 1981 AIAW National Championship team… scored 124
goals and 163 points in four year career… two time All-American…
tied for 15th on Maryland’s single-
season goals scored chart.
KAREN MacCRATE (1993-96)Awarded All-American honors in both 1995 and 1996 … recorded 78
goals, 76 assists, and 154 career points… named to 1996 NCAA All-
Tournament team… member of back-to-back undefeated NCAA National
Championship teams… eighth all-time in career assists…member of
U.S. National Team … head coach at C.W. Post, where she led Post to
the first-ever Division II National Championship in 2001.
KERSTIN MANNING KIMEL (1990-93)Member of the 1992 NCAA Championship team… 1993 National De-
fensive Player of the Year… named an All-American in 1992 and
1993… 1992 NCAA All-Tournament team selection… member of
the USA Elite Women’s Lacrosse Team for five years… a member of
the U.S. National Team… current member of U.S. World Cup team…
current head coach at Duke.
MARYLYNN MORGAN (1981-84)Named to the 1984 All-American team… goalkeeper for the 1984 NCAA
All-Tournament team… recorded 720 career saves… owns high-
est Maryland save percentage (.729)… member of 1981 AIAW
National Championship team.
CATHY NELSON (1995-98)Named All-American two times… ranks in Maryland’s top 10 for single-sea-
son goals, assists, and points… 1998 NCAA Tournament MVP… second-
leading scorer on the 1998 NCAA National Championship team… eleventh
on Maryland’s career goals chart… ranks seventh and ninth in career as-
sists and points respectively… a member of the U.S. National Team…
current head coach at Denver.
SASCHA NEWMARCH (1995-98)A member of four national championship teams…three
time All-American honoree… ranks ninth in career goals
and assists… eighth on Maryland’s all-time career points
chart… scored 149 goals, 74 assists, and 223 points in her four year
career at Maryland… a current member of the Australian World Cup Team.
MARY ANN OELGOETZ MELTZER (1987-90)Named 1990 National Offensive Player of the Year… 1990 NCAA All-
Tournament team honors… ranks in the Top 15 for single season
goals, assists, and points… for Maryland career scored 130 goals, 48
assists, and 178 points.
CARIN PETERSON (1986-88)Recorded 116 goals and 158 career assists… named All-Ameri-
can in two of her three years at Maryland … member of the 1986
NCAA Championship team.
TONIA PORRAS (1997-2000)Named 2000 National Defensive Player of the Year… four
consecutive NCAA National Championships… All-American
in 1999 and 2000… 2000 ACC all-tournament team… 2000
All-ACC defensive team…81-4 career record… anchored
2000 Maryland defense that allowed a 6.9 GAPG average.
KAY RUFFINO (1982-85)Member of two straight NCAA runner-up teams…
recorded 112 goals and 52 assists… All-American
honoree in both 1984 and 1985… scored 164
career points… member of the 1984 NCAA All-
Tournament team.
MAUREEN SCOTT DUPACK (1991-94)Member of four consecutive NCAA Tournament semifinal appearances… mem-
ber of 1992 National Championship team… 1994 All-American honoree… former
assistant coach at Maryland (1997) … head coach at American .
KRISTIN SOMMAR (1997-2000)Three time All-American honoree… eleventh on Maryland’s all-time
career assists chart… had a record of 81-5 as a Terrapin… a mem-
ber of four national championship teams… recorded 104 goals, 72
assists, and 176 points in her collegiate career… member of the
U.S. National Team… current member of the U.S. World Cup team.
TRACEY STUMPF (1984, 86)Member of two NCAA National Championship title game appearances… key com-
ponent of the 1986 NCAA National Championship Team… two-time All-Ameri-
can… three time member of the NCAA All-Tournament team (1984, 85, 86).
KAREN TRUDEL (1983-85)Three time All-American… two straight NCAA National title game ap-
pearances… scored 135 career goals and 185 points in three years…
1985 NCAA All-Tournament team honoree.
MICHELE UHLFELDER (1988-91)Named 1991National Offensive Player of the Year… All-Ameri-
can honoree… recorded 165 career points… named to the
1991 NCAA All-Tournament team… current member of World
Cup Team… member of U.S. National and World Cup teams in 1997
and 2001 … current head coach at Stanford.
JEN ULEHLA (1990-91)Named to the 1990 NCAA All-Tournament team … an All-Ameri-
can in 1991 … member of the 1990 and 1991 NCAA runners-up …
first team All-American in 1991 and second team in 1992 ... member
of the United State National Team for five years.
JESS WILK (1989-90)Notched 368 saves in only two seasons… 1990 All-American …
member of U.S. National Team … tied for fifth all time in saves at
Maryland with 368 … member of 1997 and 2001 U.S. World Cup
championship teams.
46 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK
GOALS1. Jen Adams (1998-2001) 2672. Kelly Amonte (1993-96) 1873. Allison Comito (1998-2001) 1764. Quinn Carney (1998-2001) 162
Betsy Elder (1991-94) 1585. Anysia Fedec (1984-87) 1577. Laura Harmon (1992-95) 150
Christie Jenkins (1997-2000) 1509. Courtney Hobbs (1999-2002) 149
Sascha Newmarch (1995-98) 14911. Kelly Coppedge (2001-present) 14712. Judy Dougherty (1978-81) 14313. Cathy Nelson (1995-98) 140
14. Karen Trudel (1982-85) 135
ASSISTS1. Jen Adams (1998-2001) *1782. Kelly Amonte (1993-96) 1323. Quinn Carney (1998-2001) 1104. Judy Dougherty (1978-80) 1065. Allison Comito (1998-2001) 896. Anysia Fedec (1984-87) 837. Cathy Nelson (1995-98) 778. Karen MacCrate (1993-96) 769. Christie Jenkins (1997-2000) 74
Sascha Newmarch (1995-98) 7411. Kristin Sommar (1997-2000) 72
12. Sarah Forbes (1994-97) 62
POINTS1. Jen Adams (1998-2001) *445
2. Kelly Amonte (1993-96) 319
3. Quinn Carney (1998-2001) 272
4. Allison Comito (1998-2001) 265
5. Judy Dougherty (1978-81) 249
6. Anysia Fedec (1984-87) 240
7. Christie Jenkins (1997-2000) 224
8. Sascha Newmarch (1995-98) 223
9. Cathy Nelson (1995-98) 217
10. Courtney Hobbs (1999-2002) 20711. Kelly Coppedge (2001-present) 202
12. Betsy Elder (1991-94) 199
13. Karen Trudel (1982-85) 185
14. Lauren Harmon (1992-95) 184
*-All-Time NCAA Career Leader
Career Leaders Single-Season Leaders
Kelly Amonte
Karen MacCrate
Laura Harmon
Jen Adams
Judy Dougherty
Cathy Nelson
GOALS1. Jen Adams 88 20012. Jen Adams 81 20003. Kelly Coppedge 73 20034. Jen Adams 71 19995. Allison Comito 65 20006. Kelly Amonte 62 19967. Sarah Forbes 59 19978. Cathy Nelson 58 19989. Allison Comito 56 199910. Courtney Hobbs 55 2002
Christie Jenkins 55 1999Mary Ann Oelgoetz 55 1990
13. Betsy Elder 54 1993Sandy Lanahan 54 1981
Anysia Fedec 54 1986
ASSISTS1. Jen Adams 60 20012. Jen Adams 55 20003. Kelly Amonte 48 19964. Jen Adams 46 19995. Quinn Carney 43 20006. Sascha Newmarch 42 19987. Judy Dougherty 38 19798. Sarah Forbes 36 19979. Acacia Walker 33 200310. Courtney Hobbs 32 2002
Cathy Nelson 32 1997Judy Dougherty 32 1980
13. Leann Shuck 30 1991Christie Jenkins 30 1999
POINTS1. Jen Adams 148 20012. Jen Adams 136 20003. Jen Adams 117 19994. Kelly Amonte 110 1993
Kelly Amonte 110 19966. Kelly Coppedge 95 20037. Sarah Forbes 94 19978. Allison Comito 92 20009. Sascha Newmarch 90 199810. Courtney Hobbs 87 200211. Mary Ann Oelgoetz 84 199012. Cathy Nelson 83 199813. Quinn Carney 81 2000
Allison Comito 81 1999
All-Time Leaders & Records
Top 12 Teams By Total WinsSchool W L T Pct. GP
1. MARYLAND 422 95 3 .814 5202. Penn State 376 148 5 .716 529
3. Loyola 329 148 10 .686 487
4. Temple 327 131 4 .712 462
5. Virginia 319 121 5 .722 445
6. Harvard 279 149 5 .650 433
7. Princeton 277 152 7 .643 436
8. William & Mary 275 164 12 .623 451
9. Lafayette 271 168 3 .617 442
10. James Madison 261 211 3 .553 475
11. Delaware 256 177 1 .591 434
12. Yale 256 148 5 .632 409
Top 12 Teams By Win Pct.School W L T Pct. GP
1. MARYLAND 422 95 3 .814 5202. Virginia 319 121 5 .722 445
3. Penn State 376 148 5 .716 529
4. Temple 327 131 4 .712 462
5. North Carolina 96 42 0 .696 138
6. Loyola 329 148 10 .686 487
7. Harvard 279 149 5 .650 433
8. Princeton 277 152 7 .643 436
9. Yale 256 148 5 .632 409
10. William & Mary 275 164 12 .623 451
11. Colgate 247 163 4 .601 414
12. Duke 83 55 0 .601 138
Team Scoring RecordsGoals: 351 in 22 games, 2000
Fewest Goals Allowed: 43 in 11 games, 1977
Consecutive Wins: 50, 1995-1997
Highest Scoring Average: 16.0 goals per game, 2000
Single Game RecordsGoals: 9, Sue Abrams vs. Georgetown, 1977
Assists: 6, Jen Adams vs. Duke, 2001; Sarah Forbes vs. Brown,
1997; Kelly Amonte vs. Penn State, 1994; Karen MacCrate vs.
Rutgers, 1993; Judy Dougherty vs. Rutgers, 1979
Points: 12, Jen Adams vs. Johns Hopkins, 2001
11, Kelly Amonte vs. Penn State, 1991; Judy Dougherty vs.
Salisbury St., 1979; Kay Ruffino vs. Towson State, 1984
Saves: Denise Wescott vs. Penn State, 1977
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 47
ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
Kelly Amonte• D-I Most Valuable Player, 1996• National Offensive Player ofthe Year, 1996• National Defensive Player ofthe Year, 1995• ACC Female Athlete of theYear, 1996
Betsy Elder• National Offensive Player of
the Year, 1994
Sarah Forbes• National Offensive Player of
the Year, 1997
• ACC Female Athlete of the
Year, 1997
KerstinManning• National DefensivePlayerof the Year, 1993
Mary AnnOelgoetz• National OffensivePlayer of the Year, 1990
MandyStevenson• National Goalkeeperof the Year, 1993
MicheleUhlfelder• National OffensivePlayer of the Year, 1991
U.S. National Team Players From Maryland
Kelly Amonte Jamie Brodsky Erin Brown Liz Downing Randall Flynn Dana Gwaltney Laura Harmon Theresa IngramQuinn Carney
Jen Adams• Tewaaraton Award, 2001• Honda Award, 2000, 2001• National Player of the Year,1999, 2000, 2001• National Attacker of the Year,1999, 2000, 2001• ACC Female Athlete of the Year,2000, 2001
MaryKondner• National DefensivePlayer of the Year, 1990
Karen MacCrate Kerstin ManningAlex Kahoe Maureen Scott Kristin Sommar Jessica WilkMichele UhlfelderCathy NelsonChristie Jenkins
Alex Kahoe• National Goalkeeper of the
Year, 2000
Tonia Porras• National Defensive
Player of the Year, 2000
National Players of the Year
Kelly Coppedge• Tewaaraton Finalist, 2003• National Midfielder of theYear, 2003
AlexisVenechanos• National Goalkeeperof the Year, 2003
Jen Ulehla
48 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK
All-Time All-Americans
Jen Adams1999-2001
Betsy Elder1992-94
Dana Gwaltney1997
Lynn Baysinger1982
Anysia Fedec1986-87
Laura Harmon1993-95
Laura Beal1986
Celine Flinn1984
Wendy Heald1985
Jamie Brodsky1995-96
Jen Fink1992
Christie Jenkins1998-2000
Erin Brown1990
Alex Kahoe1998-2000
Kim Chorosiewski1987
Sarah Forbes1995-97
Mary Kondner1990
Lynn Frame1983
Sandy Lanahan1980-81
Caryl Duckworth1997
Leigh Frendberg1991-92
Liz Downing1995-96
Kelly Amonte1993-96
Quinn Carney1999, 2001
Lori Conley1988
Allison Comito2000-01
Courtney Hobbs2002
Kelly Coppedge2002-03
Sonia Judd2003
Laura LeMire1981
AcademicAll-Americans
Jen Adams, 2000
Jamie Brodsky, 1996
Betsy Elder, 1993-94
Theresa Ingram, 1994
Annie Morris, 2002Sascha Newmarch, 1998
Julie Shank, 2002-03
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 49
ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
Chris Macko1991
Kerstin Manning1992-93
Patty Parichy1993-94
Amy Patton1985
Carin Peterson1987-88
Marylynne Morgan1984
Joan Rotoloni1985
Joan Murphy1983-84
Cathy Nelson1997-98
Sascha Newmarch1996-98
Mary Ann Oelgoetz1989-90
Tonia Porras1999-2000
Kristin Sommar1998-2000
Mandy Stevenson1992-93
Tracy Stumpf1985-86
Kim Terhorst1992
Kay Ruffino1984-85
Karen Trudel1983-85
Maureen Scott1994
Nancy Scott1987
LeAnn Shuck1991
Judy Turnbaugh1987
Michele Uhlfelder1987
Jennifer Ulehla1990-91
Sharon Watson1982
Courtney Martinez2001
Karen MacCrate1995-96
Julie Shank2003
Alexis Venechanos2003
JessicaWilk1990
JackieWilliams1983-84
AmyZink1994
ToriWellington2001
Acacia Walker2003
50 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK
All-Time Roster & StatisticsScoringName Years Goals Asts Pts
Adams, Jen 1998-2001 267 178 445
Adams, Trisha 1997 1 1 2
Althoff, Pam 1991-92 0 0 0
Amonte, Kelly 1993-96 187 132 319
Backer, Gwen 1985 12 2 14
Bass, Linda 1985 2 1 3
Baysinger, Lynn 1982 1 1 2
Beal, Laura 1983-86 5 1 6
Beatty, Beth 1991 0 0 0
Beer, Wendy 1984-86 63 20 83
Berzins, Kelly 1997 0 0 0
Bragg, Jenn 1991 0 0 0
Brown, Erin 1989-90 27 10 37
Brown, Sue 1978-80 93 52 145
Budka, Jen 1992-94 1 0 1
Cantermen, Leslie 1982-83 15 5 20
Carney, Quinn 1998-2001 162 110 272
Carrington, Meg 1998-2001 0 0 0
Chelius, Ginette 1994-97 42 8 50
Clinton, Emily 2003-pres. 0 0 0
Collins, Annie 2001-pres. 48 16 64Comito, Allison 1998-2001 176 89 265
Conley, Lori 1986-88 15 3 18
Coppedge, Kelly 2001-pres. 147 55 202Corbett, Mary 1978 2 5 7
Cosby, Ann 1996 0 0 0
Cosentino, Chris 1980 20 16 36
Cougnet, Allesha 1989 1 0 1
Cox, Delia 2003-pres. 36 6 42Crawford, Kristin 1998-2001 1 1 2
Critchfield, Sue 1979 3 1 4
Daley, GiGi 1979-82 27 9 36
Davis, Deanna 1996-97 0 0 0
Doran, Janet 1987-90 2 1 3
Dorney, Jessica 2002-pres. 30 6 36Dougherty, Judy 1978-81 143 106 249
Downey, Heather 1989 1 1 2
Downing, Liz 1993-96 22 19 41
Duckworth, Caryl 1994-97 27 36 63
Duncan, Tammy 1984 0 0 0
Duncan, Tracie 1978-81 30 26 56
Egan, Meredith 1998-2002 90 35 125
Ehrlich, Zoe 1997 0 0 0
Elder, Betsy 1991-94 158 41 199
Fedec, Anysia 1984-87 157 83 240
Fine, Amy 1994-95 2 1 3
Fink, Jen 1989-92 35 13 48
Fink, Rebecca 1993-94, 1997 1 1 2
Flinn, Celine 1981-84 3 4 7
Foran, Tara 1998-2001 1 0 1
Forbes, Sarah 1994-97 107 63 170
Frame, Lynn 1980-83 20 22 42
Frandé, Bridget 2000 1 0 1
Frazer, Lacy 1988-89 17 15 32
Frendberg, Leigh 1990-92 105 24 129
Gannon, Tammy 1978-79 9 8 17
Gates, Lisa 1993 0 0 0
Gatewood, Judy 1980 2 1 3
German, Jen 1994-96 1 0 1
Goldsborough, Randall1993-96 45 17 62
Goodall, Dawn 1979-80 1 4 5
Goodell, Liz 1986-87 2 4 6
Goss, Holly 1988, 1990 1 1 2
Griffing, Judy 1979 16 7 23
Gwaltney, Dana 1994-97 32 10 42
Harmon, Laura 1992-95 150 34 184
Heald, Wendy 1986 34 26 60
Herrmann, Helena 1994-96, 98 3 4 7
Hilton, Kate 2001 0 0 0
Hobbs, Courtney 1999-2002 149 58 207
Holder, Nadine 1991 0 0 0
Name Years Goals Asts Pts
Holmes, Missy 1994-97 8 2 10
Holtschneider, Sharon 1978 19 8 27
Houston, Terry 1978 0 1 1
Howley, Annie 2002-pres. 0 0 0Hudson, Traci 1985, 1987-88 13 4 17
Hughes, Niav 2000-01 0 0 0
Hussey, Jen 1986-89 86 29 115
Ingram, Theresa 1991-94 45 33 78
Jaissle, Emily 2003-pres. 0 3 3
Janssens, Abigail 1982-85 45 14 59
Jenkins, Christie 1997-2000 140 74 224
Jones, Caroline 1996-97 2 0 2
Judd, Sonia 2000-2003 111 55 166
Kearney, Stacey 1991 1 0 1
Kelly, Kristin 2001-2002 0 0 0
Kelly, Megan 1999-2002 1 1 2
Kennedy, Meredith 1994-96 0 0 0
Ketchum, Penn 1996 0 0 0
Knapp, Kerry 1978 19 6 25
Knerr, Eliza 1994-97 3 1 4
Kondner, Mary 1987-90 31 14 45
Kopack, Justyn 2000 0 0 0
Krausse, Amy 1989 1 2 3
Krumbiegel, Ann 1991-94 20 9 29
Lambert, Molly 2001-pres. 10 5 15Lamon, Gretchen 1983-84 21 6 27
Lanahan, Sandy 1979-81 124 39 163
Laubach, Ryan 1994-97 7 7 14
Law, Liz 1988 0 0 0
Leggio, Kristie 2002-2003 48 30 78
LeMire, Andrea 1981-84 29 13 42
LeMire, Laura 1979-81 8 11 19
Lewis, Heather 1983-87 0 0 0
Likens, Patty 1986-87 35 13 48
Lund, Kathleen 1995-98 0 0 0
MacCrate, Karen 1993-96 78 76 154
Macko, Chris 1989-92 3 5 8
Mallon, Meg 2001-pres. 0 2 2Manning, Kerstin 1990-93 37 17 54
Markette, Danielle 1997-2000 0 0 0
Marmion, Jenny 2002-pres. 0 0 0Martinez, Courtney 1998-2001 7 15 22
McLeod, Tess 2002-pres. 2 0 2McNamara, Meg 1998-2001 51 20 71
Meiser, Helen-Marie 1994-96 12 8 20
Michaels, Melissa 1993 0 0 0
Millon, Tracie 1997-2000 5 3 8
Mitchell, Noelle 1995-98 53 5 58
Moore, Liz 1988 1 0 1
Morris, Annie 1999-2002 3 1 4
Motley, Jaimee 2003-pres 1 0 1Moxely, Lori 1980, 1982 1 1 2
Muller, Carolyn 1988-89 10 2 12
Mulligan, Kerri 1998-2001 3 0 3
Mullins, Cailin 1993-94 0 1 1
Murphy, Sissy 1982-84 34 15 49
Nelson, Cathy 1995-98 140 77 217
Newmarch, Sascha 1995-98 149 74 223
O’Brien, Meredith 2002-pres. 0 0 0Oelgoetz, Mary Ann 1987-90 130 48 178
Parichy, Patty 1991-94 10 6 16
Patton, Amy 1984-85, 88 14 2 16
Peterson, Carin 1986-88 116 42 158
Peterson, Jane 1990-91 17 5 22
Piccioni, Annamarie 1995-98 2 2 4
Pierce, Lisa 1978-79 61 42 103
Porras, Tonia 1997-2000 7 13 20
Powell, Heather 1992 1 0 1
Reinhardt, Carrie 2002 0 0 0
Richards, Brooke 2003-pres. 4 3 7Ried, Lauren 2003 1 0 1
Riley, Tami 1993-96 7 8 15
Robinson, Katie 2000-02 17 12 29
Name Years Goals Asts Pts
Rockwell, Katie 1996 0 0 0
Rosenwinkel, Sarah 1997 2 0 2
Rotoloni, Joan 1984-85 0 1 1
Ruffino, Kay 1982-85 112 52 164
Ruth, Kaaren 1983-86 53 27 80
Schmuhl, Audrey 1981-84 20 4 24
Schofield, Sally 1980-83 87 18 105
Schrieber, Amy 1978-79 15 8 23
Scott, Maureen 1991-94 40 18 58
Scott, Nancy 1985-87 9 1 10
Shank, Becky 1999-2000 1 1 2
Shank, Julie 2000-2003 10 9 19
Shuck, Jen 1989-90 0 0 0
Shuck, LeAnn 1989-91 69 41 110
Shulman, Marci 1988 0 0 0
Slingluff, Rebecca 1994-96 2 1 3
Sommar, Katie 2000-01 0 0 0
Sommar, Kristin 1997-2000 104 72 176
Sommar, Megan 2002-pres. 0 0 0Sommers, Greta 2002-pres. 6 1 7Snitzer, Brandy 1990 0 0 0
Stone, Jen 1989-90 15 3 18
Stone, Lori 1991-93 6 8 14
Stumpf, Tracy 1984, 86 0 1 1
Sudina, Kristin 2000-02 0 0 0
Sweeney, Melissa 2000-02 0 0 0
Terhorst, Kim 1990-92 14 5 19
Testoni, Judy 1986 10 4 14
Turnbaugh, Judy 1985-87 55 22 77
Trudel, Karen 1983-85 135 50 185
Uhlela, Jen 1990-91 3 1 4
Uhlfelder, Michele 1988-91 110 55 165
Valentine, Lisa 2003-pres. 0 0 0
Van Norden, Wendy 1999-2001 0 0 0
Venanzi, Katie 1996-98 0 0 0
Visco, Kelli 1987-90 11 8 19
Walker, Acacia 2002-pres. 48 47 95Ward, Tricia 1998-present 0 0 0
Warren, Laura 2002-pres. 9 5 14Watson, Sharon 1980-82 25 14 39
Weiss, Brandy 1995 0 0 0
Wellington, Tori 1998-2001 46 12 58
Wheat, Debbie 1999-2000 0 0 0
Williams, Jackie 1981-84 49 19 68
Zimmerman, Diane 1982 5 2 7
Zink, Amy 1991-94 2 2 4
GoalkeepingName Years Saves GA Sv %
Barclay, Brenda 1980 1 3 .250
Bernard, Mary 1984-85 149 93 .384
Blouin, Kim 1999-2000 2 3 .400
Brodsky, Jamie 1992, 94-96 325 164 .664
Bugai, Joan 1985-87 13 11 .458
Cassilly, Ruth 1990-91 21 17 .553
Chorosiewski, Kim 1985-88 550 393 .583
Evans, Emily 1997-98 22 9 .710
Gorman, Cara 2000-2003 50 45 .526
Kahoe, Alex 1997-2000 968 570 .629
Kruhm, Kirsten 1993-96 77 49 .611
Miles, Kirah 2002-pres. 12 14 .461Morgan, Marylynne 1981-84 720 268 .729
Muttamara, Fon 1999 0 2 .000
Solomon, Virginia 2000-2001 37 23 .625
Steadman, Laura 1981 0 2 .000
Stevenson, Mandy 1989, 91-93 368 243 .602
Venechanos, Alexis 2000-2003 446 448 .499
Wescott, Denise 1978-80 519 222 .699
Wilk, Jessica 1989-90 368 175 .678
Kelly Amonte
Ginette Chelius
Cheryl Duckworth
Leigh Frendberg
Theresa Ingram
Kerry Knapp
Chris Macko
Carin Peterson
Kay Ruffino
Karen Trudel
Amy Zink
Mandy Stevenson
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 51
ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
All-Time Game-By-Game Results19747-4 OverallHead Coach Sue Tyler3/28 Essex C.C. W 7-3
4/3 Wilson W 10-1
4/6 Millersville W 11-6
4/11 Madison W 12-8
4/17 Mary Washington W 7-6
4/19 West Chester L 7-13
4/20 Ursinus College L 2-12
4/23 Towson L 4-12
4/25 Penn State W 9-8
4/26 Towson1 L 6-15
4/27 UMBC W 14-01 Maryland State Tournament
19756-8 OverallHead Coach MargariteArrighi4/3 Salisbury W 11-84/5 Millersville L 5-74/11 Frostburg W 12-114/12 Ursinus College L 3-74/12 Madison W 3-24/15 Delaware L 10-134/17 Mary Washington L 6-134/19 Wilson W 19-14/22 West Chester L 6-104/24 Towson L 4-124/29 Penn State L 6-135/2 Towson1 L 6-17
Salisbury1 W 16-4Frostburg1 W 9-7
1 Maryland State Tournament
19765-7 OverallHead Coach Sue Tyler3/30 Millersville L 3-94/1 Salisbury W 7-44/6 Ursinus L 3-194/8 Brown W 8-24/9 Frostburg W 11-84/10 Madison L 4-114/13 West Chester L 2-164/21 Towson L 9-114/23 Anne Arundel1 W 11-64/24 Essex C.C.1 W 10-74/24 Towson1 L 6-74/27 Penn State L 2-131 Maryland State Tournament
197712-2 OverallHead Coach Sue Tyler3/27 Georgetown W 23-03/30 Frostburg W 16-14/7 Mary Washington W 11-24/9 Brown W 16-44/11 Millersville W 14-14/15 Madison W 6-54/16 Ursinus L 4-74/19 Towson W 17-14/22 Salisbury1 W 16-04/23 Towson1 W 9-34/23 Essex1 W 13-84/26 Delaware W 12-34/30 Penn State L 5-85/2 West Chester W 4-121 Maryland State Tournament
5/3 PENNSYLVANIA W 16-65/7 NORTHWESTERN1 W 11-75/11 VIRGINIA2 W 12-75/17 PENN STATE3 W 11-101 NCAA Quarterfinals (at College Park)2 NCAA Semifinals (at College Park)3 NCAA Finals (at College Park)
198712-5 OverallNCAA QuarterfinalistsHead Coach Sue Tyler3/13 Harvard W 12-93/19 Delaware W 12-63/24 Temple L 11-53/26 Towson State W 23-53/29 Massachusetts W 14-54/2 Richmond W 24-34/10 William & Mary W 15-124/11 Northwestern L 8-94/14 Old Dominion W 10-54/18 Rutgers W 13-24/20 Virginia L 7-94/23 West Chester W 15-94/28 Loyola ot W 10-94/29 James Madison W 13-95/2 Pennsylvania 2 ot W 9-85/3 Penn State L 12-55/6 Virginia1 L 5-101 NCAA Quarterfinals
198811-7 OverallHead Coach Sue Tyler3/21 at Delaware L 11-123/22 TEMPLE L 7-83/29 VIRGINIA W 11-83/31 RICHMOND W 7-64/2 at James Madison W 6-34/4 AUSTRALIA (Exh.) L 8-94/5 at Towson W 7-44/7 at William & Mary L 6-74/9 NORTHWESTERN L 6-74/12 OLD DOMINION W 13-54/14 PENN STATE L 8-114/16 RUTGERS W 12-24/17 NEW HAMPSHIRE W 8-04/22 at Massachusetts W 7-64/24 at Harvard L 7-104/28 WEST CHESTER W 20-54/30 PENNSYLVANIA W 13-7
5/4 at Loyola W 14-4
19899-7 OverallHead Coach Sue Tyler3/16 Delaware L 11-12
Temple L 7-9
Massachusetts W 8-4
Harvard L 5-10
Virginia L 5-10
Richmond W 10-7
4/1 James Madison W 8-2
4/4 Towson W 13-5
4/7 William & Mary L 8-9
4/8 Northwestern W 8-7
4/11 Old Dominion W 8-6
Penn State L 6-10
Rutgers W 11-8
West Chester L 7-6
Pennsylvania W 7-3
5/3 Loyola W 13-10
197812-2-1 OverallAIAW Runners-upHead Coach Sue Tyler4/1 Essex C.C. W 15-4
4/4 Delaware W 14-4
4/6 West Chester W 7-4
4/10 Salisbury W 18-3
4/11 Towson W 10-6
4/14 William & Mary L 12-9
4/18 Madison W 9-2
4/21 Salisbury1 W 13-2
4/22 Towson1 W 9-6
4/25 Penn State T 1-1
Virginia W 14-1
Ursinus W 6-3
Yale$ ot W 7-6
East Stroudsburg2 W 5-4
Penn State3 L 3-91 Maryland State Tournament2 EAIAW Regionals3 AIAW National Championship
197910-6 OverallHead Coach Sue Tyler3/27 Towson W 4-2
4/5 West Chester L 8-7
4/11 Essex C.C. W 26-2
4/17 Princeton L 8-7
4/19 Delaware W 12-5
4/24 Penn State L 6-5
4/28 Salisbury1 W 24-2
4/28 Johns Hopkins1 W 17-1
4/29 Towson1 W 13-3
4/30 Ursinus L 6-7
5/5 Rutgers W 11-5
5/8 Madison W 16-4
5/18 Yale2 L 5-6
5/18 Virginia2 W 17-2
5/19 Madison2 W 8-4
5/20 William & Mary2 L 5-61 Maryland State Tournament2 AIAW National Tournament
198016-1 OverallHead Coach Sue Tyler3/25 Harvard W 8-4
3/27 Towson W 16-5
4/3 Ursinus W 8-7
4/10 West Chester W 11-7
4/12 James Madison W 15-7
4/15 Princeton W 11-1
4/19 Delaware W 12-5
4/22 William & Mary W 8-5
4/25 UMBC W 16-2
4/26 Salisbury W 27-4
4/27 Towson W 11-2
4/29 Penn State W 7-6
5/1 Essex C.C. W 25-4
5/3 Rutgers W 13-7
5/9 New Hampshire1 W 6-1
5/10 Pennsylvania1 W 5-4
5/11 Penn State1 L 1-31 AIAW Tournament (Princeton, N.J.)
198112-3 OverallAIAW ChampionsHead Coach Sue Tyler3/24 Dartmouth W 22-3
3/26 Temple W 7-3
4/2 Ursinus W 7-3
4/8 Towson W 14-4
4/10 West Chester W 12-5
4/11 James Madison W 16-5
4/14 Princeton W 21-8
4/16 William & Mary W 23-4
4/23 Penn State L 10-15
4/27 Rutgers W 14-3
5/1 Ursinus1 L 3-6
Temple1 L 2-7
Penn State2 W 12-8
Harvard2 W 5-3
Ursinus2 W 5-41 EAIAW Regional Tournament2 AIAW National Tournament
198212-6 OverallAIAW Runners-upHead Coach Sue Tyler3/25 Pennsylvania W 9-6
3/28 Harvard L 3-6
3/30 Temple L 1-7
4/1 Ursinus W 14-9
4/3 Towson W 12-1
4/5 Virginia W 9-7
4/8 West Chester W 7-3
4/10 James Madison W 8-1
4/15 William & Mary L 4-8
4/20 Princeton W 9-8
4/22 Penn State W 7-5
4/23 Old Dominion W 7-4
4/24 Rutgers W 11-4
5/1 Temple1 L 0-3
5/2 Penn State1 L 2-9
5/14 William & Mary2 W 7-3
5/15 Pennsylvania2 W 7-5
5/16 Temple2 L 2-31 EAIAW Regionals2 AIAW National Tournament
198311-3-1 OverallNCAA QuarterfinalistsHead Coach Sue Tyler3/24 Pennsylvania L 4-5
3/28 Harvard ot W 7-6
3/29 Temple T 3-3
3/31 Towson State W 9-2
4/5 Virginia W 9-8
4/9 James Madison W 8-4
4/12 Richmond W 13-7
4/17 West Chester W 7-4
4/19 Princeton W 14-7
4/21 Penn State L 8-3
4/23 Rutgers W 12-3
4/26 Old Dominion W 13-3
4/28 William & Mary W 14-9
5/3 Loyola W 7-4
5/14 Delaware1 L 11-81 NCAA Quarterfinals
198416-1-1 OverallNCAA Runners-UpHead Coach Sue Tyler3/17 Harvard W 9-2
3/22 Delaware T 8-8
3/27 Temple W 9-7
4/3 Virginia W 5-4
4/4 Richmond W 12-2
4/7 James Madison ot W 7-6
4/14 William & Mary W 6-5
4/17 Princeton W 19-3
4/19 Penn State W 9-8
4/20 Rutgers W 12-2
4/24 Penn W 6-3
4/25 Old Dominion W 16-3
4/27 West Chester W 9-6
5/1 Loyola W 10-7
5/5 Towson State W 18-4
5/12 Lehigh1 W 12-6
5/19 Massachusetts2 W 9-3
5/20 Temple3 L 4-61 NCAA Quarterfinals2 NCAA Semifinals3 NCAA Finals (at Boston)
198515-2 OverallNCAA Runners-UpHead Coach Sue Tyler3/26 at Temple L 6-10
3/28 TOWSON STATE W 29-5
3/31 vs. Harvard W 13-2
4/2 at Virginia W 11-6
4/4 at Richmond W 20-6
4/5 NEW HAMPSHIRE W 14-9
4/7 JAMES MADISON W 20-9
4/12 WILLIAM & MARY W 16-6
4/14 NORTHWESTERN W 17-5
4/18 at Penn State W 8-6
4/20 at Rutgers W 15-8
4/22 at Pennsylvania W 8-1
4/25 DELAWARE W 19-8
4/26 at West Chester W 10-6
4/30 LOYOLA W 17-6
5/11 PENN STATE1 W 12-11
5/19 New Hampshire2 L 5-61 NCAA Semifinals (College Park)2 NCAA Finals (Philadelphia, Pa.)
198615-4 OverallNational ChampionsHead Coach Sue Tyler3/20 at Delaware W 12-63/25 TEMPLE L 8-113/27 at Towson W 35-74/1 VIRGINIA L 12-134/4 at James Madison W 13-64/5 at New Hampshire W 7-64/6 RICHMOND W 16-34/11 at William & Mary L 12-134/12 HARVARD L 7-84/15 OLD DOMINION W 11-44/17 PENN STATE W 11-64/19 RUTGERS W 13-74/24 WEST CHESTER W 17-44/27 NORTHWESTERN W 11-64/29 at Loyola W 11-4
52 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK
199016-2 OverallNCAA Runners-UpHead Coach Sue Tyler3/15 at Delaware W 12-10
3/22 MASSACHUSETTS W 15-4
3/27 VIRGINIA ot W 6-5
3/28 RICHMOND W 17-5
4/1 OLD DOMINION W 16-2
4/7 NORTHWESTERN ot W 14-12
4/10 at UMBC W 16-3
4/12 PENN STATE W 9-7
4/14 RUTGERS W 18-3
4/17 at William & Mary W 8-7
4/19 at James Madison W 13-6
4/22 at Harvard L 10-11
4/26 WEST CHESTER W 14-0
4/28 PENNSYLVANIA W 14-6
5/1 at Loyola W 8-6
5/3 TEMPLE W 9-5
5/19 Loyola1 W 10-5
5/20 Harvard2 L 7-81 NCAA Semifinals (at Princeton, N.J.)2 NCAA Finals (at Princeton, N.J.)
199114-3 OverallNCAA Runners-UpHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/8 at Richmond W 15-4
3/14 DELAWARE W 12-2
3/17 at Old Dominion W 18-3
3/26 at Virginia L 5-6
3/28 HARVARD W 6-5
3/30 JAMES MADISON W 10-7
4/2 TOWSON STATE W 11-7
4/5 NORTHWESTERN W 18-6
4/7 at Temple W 9-7
4/9 UMBC W 14-7
4/11 at Penn State L 6-7
4/17 WILLIAM & MARY W 9-8
4/25 at West Chester W 17-10
4/28 at Pennsylvania W 17-1
4/30 LOYOLA W 11-7
5/18 New Hampshire1 W 4-3
5/19 Virginia2 L 6-81 NCAA Semifinals (Trenton, N.J.)2 NCAA Finals(Trenton, N.J.)
199214-1 OverallNational ChampionsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/17 at Delaware W 12-5
3/24 VIRGINIA W 5-4
3/28 at James Madison W 13-3
3/31 OLD DOMINION W 13-2
4/5 TEMPLE W 9-1
4/7 TOWSON STATE W 15-4
4/11 at Harvard L 5-7
4/12 at Vermont W 15-4
4/14 RICHMOND W 17-0
4/22 at William & Mary W 9-6
4/25 PENNSYLVANIA W 17-6
4/28 at Loyola W 13-12
5/2 PENN STATE W 9-6
5/16 Virginia1 ot W 8-7
5/17 Harvard2 ot W 11-101 NCAA Semifinals (Bethlehem, Pa.)2 NCAA Finals (Bethlehem, Pa.)
199312-2 OverallNCAA SemifinalistsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/11 DELAWARE W 21-4
3/23 at Virginia L 9-11
3/25 DARTMOUTH W 15-4
3/30 at Brown W 16-2
4/3 HARVARD W 11-10
4/6 TOWSON STATE W 18-7
4/9 at Old Dominion W 20-6
4/12 at Temple W 17-6
4/22 WILLIAM & MARY W 16-5
4/25 at Pennsylvania W 15-6
4/27 LOYOLA W 16-5
4/28 JAMES MADISON W 12-8
5/1 at Penn State W 14-7
5/15 PRINCETON1 L 6-71 NCAA Semifinals (at College Park)
199413-1 OverallNCAA Runners-UpHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/19 TEMPLE W 17-4
3/22 VIRGINIA W 5-1
3/24 at Delaware W 18-3
3/26 at James Madison W 15-6
4/2 U.S. Nat’l Team (Exb.) W 7-5
4/3 OLD DOMINION W 16-6
4/5 at Towson State W 17-7
4-17 at Harvard W 11-2
4/21 at William & Mary W 14-3
4/26 at Loyola W 11-5
4/30 PENN STATE W 21-4
5/4 at Princeton W 12-10
5/21 LOYOLA1 W 19-4
5/22 PRINCETON2 L 7-101 NCAA Semifinals (at College Park)2 NCAA Finals (at College Park)
199517-0 OverallNational ChampionsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/9 DELAWARE W 15-43/18 at Temple W 13-53/21 at Virginia W 7-43/26 at Georgetown W 17-73/28 at UMBC W 11-24/1 at Old Dominion W 16-24/4 TOWSON STATE W 17-44/8 JAMES MADISON W 9-34/11 RUTGERS W 18-14/15 HARVARD W 14-44/25 LOYOLA W 13-44/27 WILLIAM & MARY W 16-64/29 at Penn State W 5-35/2 PRINCETON W 9-85/6 at Dartmouth W 12-45/20 Penn State1 W 12-75/21 Princeton2 W 13-51 NCAA Semifinals (at Bethlehem, Pa.)2 NCAA Finals (at Bethlehem, Pa.)
199619-0 OverallNational ChampionsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/9 at North Carolina W 14-23/10 at Duke W 12-13/16 TEMPLE W 15-43/18 at Delaware W 19-33/20 VIRGINIA W 16-53/23 GEORGETOWN W 17-1
3/26 UMBC W 18-23/30 OLD DOMINION W 19-44/2 at Towson State W 21-34/6 at James Madison W 8-34/10 at Rutgers W 20-24/13 at Harvard W 17-14/23 at Loyola W 9-64/25 at William & Mary W 13-54/27 PENN STATE W 10-65/1 at Princeton W 14-75/4 DARTMOUTH W 16-45/18 Princeton1 W 6-55/19 Virginia2 W 10-51 NCAA Semifinals (at Bethlehem, Pa.)2 NCAA Finals (at Bethlehem, Pa.)
199721-1 OverallNational ChampionsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/8 NORTH CAROLINA* W 10-83/9 DUKE* W 13-23/17 at Temple W 14-43/19 at Virginia* W 6-53/22 at Vanderbilt W 14-13/25 BROWN W 14-53/27 DELAWARE W 9-83/29 at Old Dominion W 17-14/2 TOWSON STATE W 13-54/5 JAMES MADISON W 15-94/12 HARVARD W 17-44/16 at Georgetown W 15-104/19 Duke1 W 14-44/20 Virginia1 W 11-104/22 LOYOLA L 6-74/24 WILLIAM & MARY W 10-94/26 at Penn State W 12-114/30 PRINCETON W 14-85/3 at Dartmouth W 16-55/10 PENN STATE2 W 6-25/17 Temple3 W 9-65/18 Loyola4 W 8-71 ACC Tournament (at Charlottesville)2 NCAA Quarterfinals (at College Park)3 NCAA Semifinals (Bethlehem, Pa.)4 NCAA Finals (Bethlehem, Pa.)
199818-3 OverallNational ChampionsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/6 at Duke* L 6-10
3/8 at North Carolina* L 9-10
3/14 SYRACUSE W 21-7
3/18 VIRGINIA* W 11-8
3/22 HARVARD W 13-6
3/25 at Dartmouth W 16-7
3/28 OLD DOMINION W 18-1
3/30 VANDERBILT W 16-4
3/31 TEMPLE W 11-5
4/4 at James Madison W 14-11
4/8 at Towson W 23-3
4/11 at Brown W 15-6
4/15 GEORGETOWN W 10-7
4/18 North Carolina1 L 10-12
4/23 at William & Mary W 16-7
4/25 at Penn State W 14-10
4/29 at Princeton W 12-11
5/3 at Loyola W 13-9
5/9 JAMES MADISON2 W 13-8
5/15 North Carolina3 W 14-9
5/17 Virginia4 W 11-51 ACC Tournament (at Charlottesville)2 NCAA Quarterfinals (at College Park)3 NCAA Semifinals (Baltimore, Md.)4 NCAA Finals (Baltimore, Md.)
199921-0 OverallNational ChampionsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/2 at Penn State W 12-83/5 DUKE * W 8-53/7 NORTH CAROLINA * W 13-73/13 SYRACUSE W 18-83/16 at Virginia * W 13-33/20 at Dartmouth W 14-43/22 at Brown W 18-33/27 at Old Dominion W 16-93/30 at Temple W 23-54/3 JAMES MADISON ot W 23-54/7 TOWSON W 21-24/11 at Harvard W 21-34/14 at Georgetown W 21-94/21 WILLIAM & MARY W 14-44/24 North Carolina1 ot W 19-174/25 Virginia1 W 13-54/28 PRINCETON 2ot W 8-75/1 LOYOLA W 17-95/8 GEORGETOWN2 W 17-65/14 Penn State3 W 17-135/16 Virginia4 W 16-61 ACC Semifinals (Chapel Hill, N.C.)2 NCAA Quarterfinals (College Park)3 NCAA Semifinls (Baltimore, Md.)4 NCAA Finals (Baltimore, Md.)
200021-1 OverallNational ChampionsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/3 at Duke* W 14-103/5 at No. Carolina* 3ot L 13-143/7 at Towson W 17-43/9 PENN STATE W 19-43/12 at Syracuse W 24-113/14 VIRGINIA* W 17-83/21 DARTMOUTH W 15-83/25 OLD DOMINION W 21-43/30 HARVARD W 21-84/1 at James Madison W 24-154/11 BROWN W 18-74/13 GEORGETOWN W 16-64/15 at Johns Hopkins W 16-34/19 at William & Mary W 13-54/22 VIRGINIA1 W 8-64/23 NORTH CAROLINA1 W 17-64/26 at Princeton W 14-74/29 at Loyola W 12-45/2 TEMPLE W 12-75/14 GEORGETOWN2 ot W 7-65/19 Loyola3 W 17-75/19 Princeton4 W 16-81 ACC Tournament2 NCAA Quarterfinals (College Park)3 NCAA Semifinals (at Trenton, N.J.)4 NCAA Finals (at Trenton, N.J.)
200123-0 OverallNational ChampionsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/2 DUKE* W 18-113/4 NORTH CAROLINA* W 8-73/10 SYRACUSE W 11-73/13 at Virginia* W 8-73/17 BROWN W 20-43/21 UMBC W 23-23/24 at Old Dominion W 13-83/30 at Penn State1 W 14-84/1 vs. Ohio State1 W 19-24/8 JAMES MADISON W 16-64/10 WM. & MARY W 17-54/12 at Georgetown W 13-94/14 JOHNS HOPKINS W 24-5
4/20 vs. Virginia*2 W 7-64/22 vs. Duke*2 W 15-124/25 PRINCETON W 7-64/28 LOYOLA W 16-125/4 at Dartmouth W 12-115/6 at Harvard W 14-45/10 Monmouth3 W 23-95/13 James Madison4 W 11-95/18 Princeton5 W 14-75/18 Georgetown6 2otW 14-131 ACC/American Lacrosse Conf. Challenge(University Park, Pa.)2 ACC Tournament (Orlando, Fla.)3 NCAA First Round (College Park)4 NCAA Quarterfinals (College Park)5 NCAA Semifinals (Baltimore, Md.)6 NCAA Finals (Baltimore, Md.)
200211-10 OverallNCAA QuarterfinalsHead Coach Cindy Timchal3/1 at Duke* L 8-93/3 at North Carolina* L 11-133/10 at Syracuse W 15-113/12 VIRGINIA* L 16-173/16 at Brown W 19-83/19 DARTMOUTH W 13-83/23 OLD DOMINION W 17-93/26 HARVARD W 18-33/29 PENN STATE1 W 13-113/31 OHIO STATE1 L 11-124/3 GEORGETOWN L 6-104/6 at James Madison L 10-114/10 at William & Mary W 21-114/13 at Johns Hopkins W 13-84/19 Virginia2 W 15-124/21 North Carolina 2 L 10-114/24 at Princeton L 9-134/27 at Loyola L 4-75/3 GEORGE MASON W 18-65/9 at Loyola3 W 13-85/12 at Cornell4 L 4-141 ACC/American Lacrosse Conf. Challenge(College Park, Md..)2 ACC Tournament (Durham. N.C..)3 NCAA First Round (Baltimore, Md.)4 NCAA Quarterfinals (Ithaca, N.Y.)
200318-4 Overall
NCAA SemifinalsHead Coach Cindy Timchal2/25 GEORGE MASON W 20-53/2 NORTH CAROLINA* W 10-83/6 DUKE* (ot) W 9-83/8 SYRACUSE (ot) W 8-73/11 at Virginia* W 11-83/15 BROWN W 15-53/18 at Dartmouth W 9-23/22 at Old Dominion1 W 16-53/28 vs. Penn State1 W 11-103/30 at Ohio State W 10-54/2 at Georgetown W 13-104/5 JAMES MADISON L 8-94/8 William & Mary W 21-64/12 JOHNS HOPKINS W 19-44/18 vs. North Carolina2 W 13-54/20 at Virginia2 W 11-64/26 VIRGINIA TECH W 18-14/20 PRINCETON L 6-135/3 LOYOLA L 8-95/8 Temple3 W 26-65/11 Dartmouth4 W 13-55/16 Virginia5 L 8-91 ACC/American Lacrosse ConferenceChallenge (Columbus, Ohio)2 ACC Tournament (Charlottesville, Va.)3 NCAA First Round (College Park, Md.)4 NCAA Quarterfinals (College Park,.)5 NCAA Semifinals (Syracuse, N.Y.)
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 53
ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
1981AIAW Champions 12-3
Maryland’s Championship Teams
NCAA Championship HistoryYear Champion (Record) Head Coach Score Runner-Up Host or Site Championship Att. (Title Game)
1982 Massachusetts (10-0) Pamela Hixon 9-6 Trenton State Trenton State 242
1983 Delaware (18-3) Janet Smith 10-7 Temple Pennsylvania 2,880
1984 Temple (16-2) Tina Sloan Green 6-4 MARYLAND Boston Univ. 1,938
1985 New Hampshire (11-3) Marisa Didio 6-5 MARYLAND Pennsylvania 1,157
1986 MARYLAND (15-4) Sue Tyler 11-10 Penn State MARYLAND 1,5551987 Penn State (17-2) Susan Scheetz 7-6 Temple MARYLAND 1,1691988 Temple (19-0) Tina Sloan Green 15-7 Penn State Haverford 2,570
1989 Penn State (19-1) Susan Scheetz 7-6 Harvard West Chester 2,661
1990 Harvard (15-0) Carole Kleinfelder 8-7 MARYLAND Princeton 2,367
1991 Virginia (11-1) Jane Miller 8-6 MARYLAND Trenton State 2,338
1992 MARYLAND (14-1) Cindy Timchal 11-10 (ot) Harvard Lehigh 1,799
1993 Virginia (15-1) Jane Miller 8-6 (ot) Princeton MARYLAND 2,730 (2,000)1994 Princeton (16-1) Chris Sailer 10-7 MARYLAND MARYLAND 2,8591995 MARYLAND (17-0) Cindy Timchal 13-5 Princeton Coll. of New Jersey 9,247 (4,735)
1996 MARYLAND (19-0) Cindy Timchal 10-5 Virginia Lehigh 2,381
1997 MARYLAND (21-1) Cindy Timchal 8-7 Loyola (Md.) Lehigh 3,571
1998 MARYLAND (18-3) Cindy Timchal 11-5 Virginia UMBC 3,109 (3,109)
1999 MARYLAND (21-0) Cindy Timchal 16-6 Virginia Johns Hopkins 6,470 (4,250)
2000 MARYLAND (21-1) Cindy Timchal 16-8 Princeton Coll. of Jersey 5,598 (2,367)
2001 MARYLAND (23-0) Cindy Timchal 14-13 (2ot) Georgetown Johns Hopkins 6,673 (3,535)
2002 Princeton (19-1) Chris Sailer 12-7 Georgetown Loyola (Md.) 5,400 (3,400)
2003 Princeton (16-4) Chris Sailer 8-7 Virginia Syracuse 3,070 (1,630)
1981 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
10 Debbie Faktorow M So. Willingboro, N.J.
11 Sally Schofield A Fr. Gladwyne, Pa.
12 Norma Flicop M So. Annapolis, Md.
13 Andrea LeMire M Fr. Towson, Md.
15 Judy Dougherty A Sr. Colwyn, Pa.
16 Gigi Daley M Jr. Gladwyne, Penn.
17 Joan “Cissy” Murphy M Fr. Baltimore, Md.
18 Audrey Schmuhl M Fr. Beaford, Texas
19 Barbara Martin D Jr. Braddock Hgts, Md.
20 Sandy Lanahan A Sr. Towson, Md.
21 Lynn Frame D So. West Chester, Pa.
22 Michele O’Connell D Sr. Glen Arm, Md.
23 Laura LeMire D Sr. Towson, Md.
24 Celine Flinn D Fr. Cherry Hill, N.J.
25 Terri Savin A So. Bloomfield, Ct.
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
26 Sharon Watson D Sr. Downington, Pa.
27 Tracie Duncan M Sr. Baltimore, Md.
28 Kathleen Bates M Sr. Greenbelt, Md.
30 Donna Brown A So. Churchville, Md.
31 Mary Bernard G Fr. Blue Bell, Pa.
32 Jackie Williams M Fr. Willingboro, N.J.
33 Lynn Sapperstein A Fr. Baltimore, Md.
35 Lori Moxley D So. W. Friendship, Md.
36 Tammy Duncan D Fr. Baltimore, Md.
37 Stephanie Carr M Fr. Baltimore, Md.
38 Dawn Kopf G Fr. Severna Park, Md.
40 Lynne Baysinger A Jr. Annapolis, Md.
42 Laura Stedman G Fr. Baltimore, Md.
43 Marylynne Morgan G Fr. Lansdowne, Md.
Anne Eisinger D So. Annapolis, Md.
Head Coach: Sue Tyler
Maryland’s NCAA Most
Outstanding Performers1998 Cathy Nelson
1999 Jen Adams
2000 Jen Adams
2001 Courtney Martinez
Note: Award only given since 1998
Jen Adams Courtney
Martinez
Cathy Nelson
Longest Women’s Title
Streaks In NCAA HistoryNo. Team Sport Titles Years
1. Louisiana State Outdoor Track 11 1987-97
2. North Carolina Soccer 9 1986-94
3. MARYLAND LACROSSE 7 1995-20014. Stanford Tennis 6 1986-91
Villanova Cross Country 6 1989-94
6. Utah Gymnastics 5 1982-86
Texas Swimming & Diving 5 1984-88
Stanford Swimming & Diving 5 1992-96
Louisiana State Indoor Track 5 1993-97
Note: NCAA sponsorship of women’s sports began in 1982
Most Women’s Titles In
NCAA HistoryNo. Team Sport Titles
1. North Carolina Soccer 17
2. Louisiana State Outdoor Track 13
3. Stanford Tennis 11
4. MARYLAND LACROSSE 9Utah Gymnastics 9
Old Dominion Field Hockey 9
UCLA Softball 9
Louisiana State Indoor Track 9
9. Stanford Swimming & Diving 8
Note: NCAA sponsorship of women’s sports began in 1982
54 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK
1995NCAA Champions 17-0
1986 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
10 Sandi Brown M Fr. Cherry Hill, N.J.
11 Liz Moore M So. Havertown, Pa.
12 Judy Testoni M/A Sr. Newtown Sq., Pa.
13 Cheryl Rudio A Fr. Somerdale, N.J.
14 Alleesha Cougnet A Fr. Baltimore, Md.
15 Carin Peterson A Jr. Millersville, Md.
16 Kaaren Ruth M Sr. Baltimore, Md.
17 Lori Conley M So. Fallston, Md.
18 Traci Hudson M/A So. Crofton, Md.
19 Amy Krause M/A Fr. Crofton, Md.
20 Elizabeth Janney M Fr. Baltimore, Md.
21 Laura Beal M Sr. Annapolis, Md.
22 Anysia Fedec A Jr. Gladwyne, Pa.
23 Tracey Stumpf D Sr. Springfield, Pa.
24 Marcie Shulman M/D Fr. Baltimore, Md.
25 Wendy Heald A Sr. Annapolis, Md.
26 Wendy Beer M Sr. Baltimore, Md.
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
27 Carolyn Muller M So. Ardmore, Pa.
28 Holly Goss M/D Fr. Joppa, Md.
29 Judy Turnbaugh M Jr. Parkton, Md.
30 Liz Goodell M So. Baltimore, Md.
31 Lisa Rolle A Fr. Wilmington, Del.
32 Jennifer Lyon D So. Valley Forge, Pa.
33 JoAnn Bugai G Jr. Enfield, Conn.
34 Patty Likens M/A Jr. Perry Hall, Md.
35 Kelli Visco A Jr. Vincentown, N.J.
36 Elizabeth Law D So. Baltimore, Md.
37 Heather Lewis D Sr. Pittsburgh, Pa.
39 Nancy Scott D So. Towson, Md.
40 Kim Chorosiewski G So. Delanco, N.J.
41 Jennifer Hussey A Fr. Havertown, Pa.
42 Jessica Wilk G Fr. Pittsburgh, Pa.
43 Janet Doran M So. Cherry Hill, N.J.
Head Coach: Sue Tyler
Assistant Coach: Denise Wescott
1986
1995 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
1 Helen-Marie Meiser A Jr. Baltimore, Md.
2 Sascha Newmarch M Fr. W. Lakes, Australia
3 Kelly Amonte C Jr. Braintree, Mass.
4 Amy Fine M So. Ellicott City, Md.
5 Cathy Nelson A Fr. Ellicott City, Md.
6 Helena Herrmann M Jr. Havertown, Pa.
8 Jenifer German A Jr. Baltimore, Md.
9 Meredith Kennedy M So. Annapolis, Md.
10 Karen MacCrate A Jr. Glen Head, N.Y.
11 Caryl Duckworth M So. Surry, England
15 Kathleen Lund M Jr. Bel Air, Md.
18 Liz Downing M Fr. Topsfield, Ma.
20 Ryan Laubach D So. Havertown, Pa.
21 Brandy Weiss M Fr. Clifton Park, N.Y.
22 Laura Harmon M Sr. Havertown, Pa.
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
23 Sarah Forbes M So. Perth, Australia
24 Noelle Mitchell A So. Yorktown Hts, N.Y.
25 Eliza Knerr D So. Wyndmoor, Pa.
26 Annmarie Piccioni A So. Wayne, Pa.
27 Rebecca Slingluff A So. Baltimore, Md.
28 Tami Riley D Jr. Severna Park, Md.
29 Missy Holmes M So. Annapolis, Md.
31 Kirsten Kruhm G Jr. Fulton, Md.
32 Jamie Brodsky G Jr. So. Orange, N.J.
34 Dana Gwaltney D So. Phoenixville, Pa.
36 Ginette Chelius M So. Lloyd Harbor, N.Y.
Head Coach: Cindy Timchal
Assistant Coaches: Gary Gait, Mandy Stevenson-Hudson, Betsy
Elder, Patty Parichy, John Blatchley
1992 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
00 Jamie Brodsky G Fr. So. Orange, N.J.
1 Erin Delaney A So. Annapolis, Md.
2 Maureen Scott D So. West Chester, Pa.
3 Tami Goss G So. Longwood, Fla.
4 Lisa Gates A Jr. Columbia, Md.
7 Lori Stone M So. Worthington, Ohio
10 Heather Powell D Jr. Riva, Md.
11 Kerstin Manning D Jr. Havertown, Pa.
13 Ann Krumbiegel A So. Havertown, Pa.
14 Betsy Elder A So. Severna Park, Md.
15 Jen Budka A So. Oaks, Pa.
16 Lisa Perlstein D So. Columbia, Md.
17 Jennifer Fink M Sr. Annapolis, Md.
18 Leigh Frendberg A Sr. Worthington, Ohio
19 Chris Macko D Sr. West Chester, Pa.
20 Pam Althoff D Sr. Freeland, Md.
21 Amy Zink M So. West Chester, Pa.
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
22 Theresa Ingram A So. Baltimore, Md.
23 Kim Terhorst M Sr. Annapolis, Md.
24 Tami Riley D Fr. Millersville, Md.
25 Hillary Kuker A Fr. Severna Park, Md.
26 Irene Horvat D Fr. Victoria, Australia
27 Nadine Holder A So. Cherry Hill, N.J.
28 Laura Harmon M Fr. Havertown, Pa.
29 Cailin Mullins D So. Beckley, W.Va.
30 Patty Parichy M So. Wayne, Pa.
31 Susan Cartier A So. Red Hook, N.Y.
32 Krissy Edell A So. Glenelg, Md.
33 Mandy Stevenson G Jr. Crosswicks, N.J.
Head Coach: Cindy Timchal
Assistant Coaches: Amanda O’Leary, Jessica Wilk
1992NCAA Champions 14-1
NCAA Champions 15-4
Maryland’s Championship Teams
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 55
ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
1998NCAA Champions 18-3
1996 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
1 Helen-Marie Meiser A Sr. Baltimore, Md.
2 Sascha Newmarch M So. W. Lakes, Australia
3 Kelly Amonte M Sr. Braintree, Mass.
4 Kim Cosby A Fr. Joppa, Md.
5 Cathy Nelson A So. Ellicott City, Md.
6 Helena Herrmann M Sr. Havertown, Pa.
7 Deanna Davis M Sr. Baltimore, Md.
8 Jenifer German A Sr. Baltimore, Md.
9 Meredith Kennedy M Jr. Annapolis, Md.
10 Karen MacCrate A Sr. Glen Head, N.Y.
11 Caryl Duckworth M Jr. Surry, England
12 Randall Goldsborough M Sr. Annapolis, Md.
13 Katie Rockwell M Fr. Mt. Airy, Md.
14 Katie Venanzi M Fr. Baltimore, Md.
15 Kathleen Lund M So. Bel Air, Md.
16 Caroline Jones A Fr. Baltimore, Md.
18 Liz Downing M Sr. Topsfield, Ma.
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
20 Ryan Laubach D Jr. Havertown, Pa.
23 Sarah Forbes M Jr. Perth, Australia
24 Noelle Mitchell A Jr. Yorktown Hts, N.Y.
25 Eliza Knerr D Jr. Wyndmoor, Pa.
26 Annmarie Piccioni A Jr. Wayne, Pa.
27 Rebecca Slingluff A Jr. Baltimore, Md.
28 Tami Riley D Sr. Severna Park, Md.
29 Missy Holmes M Jr. Annapolis, Md.
31 Kirsten Kruhm G Sr. Fulton, Md.
32 Jamie Brodsky G Sr. So. Orange, N.J.
33 Alex Kahoe G Fr. Villanova, Pa.
34 Dana Gwaltney D Jr. Phoenixville, Pa.
36 Ginette Chelius M Jr. Lloyd Harbor, N.Y.
Head Coach: Cindy Timchal
Assistant Coaches: Gary Gait, Mandy Stevenson-Hudson, John
Blatchley
1996
1998 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown2 Sascha Newmarch M Sr. W. Lakes, Australia
3 Kerri Mulligan A So. Marshfield, Mass.
4 Helena Herrmann D Sr. Havertown, Pa.
5 Cathy Nelson A Sr. Ellicott City, Md.
6 Tara Foran D Fr. Davidsonville, Md.
7 Jen Adams A Fr. Brighton, So. Australia
8 Tracie Millon A So. Huntington, N.Y.
9 Allison Comito A Fr. Glen Head, N.Y.
10 Kristin Sommar M So. North Wales, Pa.
11 Tori Wellington A Fr. Chestnut Hill, Mass.
12 Courtney Martinez M Fr. Towson, Md.
13 Kristin Crawford M Fr. Millersville, Md.
14 Katie Venanzi M Jr. Baltimore, Md.
15 Kathleen Lund M Sr. Bel Air, Md.
16 Meg McNamara A Fr. East Northport, N.Y.
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
18 Tonia Porras M So. Shaker Hts, Ohio
19 Tricia Ward A So. Baltimore, Md.
20 Quinn Carney A Fr. Flemington, N.J.
21 Christie Jenkins M So. Media, Pa.
23 Meredith Egan M Fr. Maplewood, N.J.
24 Noelle Mitchell A Sr. Yorktown Hts, N.Y.
25 Meg Carington D Fr. Charlottesville, Va.
26 Annmarie Piccioni A Sr. Wayne, Pa.
27 Becky Shank D So. Arnold, Md.
31 Danielle Markette D So. Boothwyn, Pa.
33 Alex Kahoe G So. Villanova, Pa.
35 Emily Evans G So. Towson, Md.
36 Fon Muttamara G Fr. Gaithersburg, Md.
Head Coach: Cindy Timchal
Assistant Coaches: Gary Gait, Erin Brown, Dana Gwaltney
NCAA Champions 19-0
1997 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown2 Sascha Newmarch M Jr. W. Lakes, Australia
3 Kerri Mulligan A Fr. Marshfield, Mass.
4 Sarah Rosenwinkel M Jr. Wydmorr, Pa.
5 Cathy Nelson A Jr. Ellicott City, Md.
7 Deanna Davis M Sr. Baltimore, Md.
8 Tracie Millon A Fr. Huntington, N.Y.
9 Rebecca Fink M Sr. Annapolis, Md.
10 Kristin Sommar M Fr. North Wales, Pa.
11 Caryl Duckworth M Sr. Surry, England
12 Courtney Martinez M Fr. Towson, Md.
14 Katie Venanzi M So. Baltimore, Md.
15 Kathleen Lund M Jr. Bel Air, Md.
16 Caroline Jones A So. Baltimore, Md.
18 Tonia Porras M Fr. Shaker Hts, Ohio
20 Ryan Laubach D Sr. Havertown, Pa.
21 Christie Jenkins M Fr. Media, Pa.
22 Trisha Adams A Fr. Brighton, Australia
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
23 Sarah Forbes M Sr. Perth, Australia
24 Noelle Mitchell A Jr. Yorktown Hts, N.Y.
25 Eliza Knerr D Sr. Wyndmoor, Pa.
26 Annmarie Piccioni A Sr. Wayne, Pa.
27 Becky Shank D Fr. Arnold, Md.
29 Missy Holmes M Sr. Annapolis, Md.
30 Kelly Berzins M Fr. Phoenix, Ariz.
31 Danielle Markette D Fr. Boothwyn, Pa.
32 Zoe Ehrlich A Fr. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
33 Alex Kahoe G Fr. Villanova, Pa.
34 Dana Gwaltney D Sr. Phoenixville, Pa.
35 Emily Evans G Fr. Towson, Md.
36 Ginette Chelius M Sr. Lloyd Harbor, N.Y.
Head Coach: Cindy Timchal
Assistant Coaches: Gary Gait, Maureen Scott, Randall
Goldsborough, Karen MacCrate
1997NCAA Champions 21-1
Maryland’s Championship Teams
56 Championship Tradition 5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE • ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK
2001NCAA Champions 23-0
1999 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown2 Courtney Hobbs M Fr. W. Lakes, So. Australia
3 Kerri Mulligan A Jr. Marshfield, Mass.
6 Tara Foran D So. Davidsonville, Md.
7 Jen Adams A So. Brighton, So. Australia
8 Tracie Millon A Jr. Huntington, N.Y.
9 Allison Comito A So. Glen Head, N.Y.
10 Kristin Sommar M Jr. North Wales, Pa.
11 Tori Wellington A So. Chestnut Hill, Mass.
12 Courtney Martinez M So. Towson, Md.
13 Kristin Crawford M So. Millersville, Md.
16 Meg McNamara A So. East Northport, N.Y.
17 Annie Morris A Fr. Waltham, Vt.
18 Tonia Porras M Jr. Shaker Hts, Ohio
19 Tricia Ward M So. Baltimore, Md.
20 Quinn Carney A So. Flemington, N.J.
21 Christie Jenkins M Jr. Media, Pa.
22 Wendy Van Norden M Fr. Germantown, Md.
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
23 Meredith Egan M So. Maplewood, N.J.
24 Megan Kelly M Fr. Gaithersburg, Md.
25 Meg Carington D So. Charlottesville, Va.
26 Debbie Wheat A Fr. Laytonsville, Md.
27 Becky Shank D So. Arnold, Md.
30 Kim Blouin G Fr. Annapolis, Md.
31 Danielle Markette D Jr. Boothwyn, Pa.
33 Alex Kahoe G Jr. Villanova, Pa.
36 Fon Muttamara G So. Gaithersburg, Md.
Head Coach: Cindy Timchal
Assistant Coaches: Gary Gait, Sarah Forbes, Cathy Nelson,
Helena Herrmann
1999
2001 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown2 Courtney Hobbs M Jr. W. Lakes, So. Australia
3 Kerri Mulligan D R-Sr. Marshfield, Mass.
4 Julie Shank D So. Arnold, Md.
5 Sonia Judd M So Darlington, So. Australia
6 Tara Foran D Sr. Davidsonville, Md.
7 Jen Adams A Sr. Brighton, So. Australia
9 Allison Comito A Sr. Glen Head, N.Y.
10 Annie Collins A Fr. Ellicott City, Md.
11 Tori Wellington D Sr. Chestnut Hill, Mass.
12 Courtney Martinez M Sr. Towson, Md.
13 Kristin Crawford M Sr. Arnold, Md.
14 Kate Hilton D Fr. Hyattsville, Md.
15 Melissa Sweeney D So. West Chester, Pa.
16 Meg McNamara A Sr. East Northport, N.Y.
17 Annie Morris A Jr. Waltham, Vt.
18 Kelly Coppedge M Fr. Annapolis, Md.
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
19 Kristin Sudina M So. Baltimore, Md.
20 Quinn Carney M Sr. Flemington, N.J.
21 Molly Lambert M Fr. Brightwaters, N.Y.
22 Wendy Van Norden A So. Germantown, Md.
23 Meredith Egan A R-Jr. Maplewood, N.J.
24 Megan Kelly M Jr. Gaithersburg, Md.
25 Meg Carrington D Sr. Charlottesville, Va.
28 Katie Sommar D So. North Wales, Pa.
29 Niav Hughes A So. Rutherford, N.J.
31 Meg Mallon D Fr. Towson, Md.
32 Alexis Venechanos G So. Yorktown, N.Y.
33 Kristin Kelly A Fr. Gaithersburg, Md.
34 Katie Robinson A Jr. Davidsonville, Md.
36 Virginia Solomon G So. McLean, Va.
39 Cara Gorman G So. Amsterdam, N.Y.
Head Coach: Cindy Timchal
Assistant Coaches: Gary Gait, Cathy Nelson, Alex Kahoe
NCAA Champions 21-0
2000 Lacrosse RosterNo. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown2 Courtney Hobbs M So. W. Lakes, So. Australia
3 Kerri Mulligan D R-Jr. Marshfield, Mass.
4 Julie Shank D Fr. Arnold, Md.
5 Sonia Judd M Fr. Darlington, So. Australia
6 Tara Foran D Jr. Davidsonville, Md.
7 Jen Adams A Jr. Brighton, So. Australia
8 Bridget Frande M Fr. Ellicott City, Md.
9 Allison Comito A Jr. Glen Head, N.Y.
10 Kristin Sommar M Sr. North Wales, Pa.
11 Tori Wellington D Jr. Chestnut Hill, Mass.
12 Courtney Martinez M Jr. Towson, Md.
13 Kristin Crawford M Jr. Arnold, Md.
14 Justyn Kopack D Fr. Arnold, Md.
15 Melissa Sweeney D Fr. West Chester, Pa.
16 Meg McNamara A Jr. East Northport, N.Y.
17 Annie Morris A So. Waltham, Vt.
18 Tonia Porras D Sr. Shaker Hts, Ohio
19 Kristin Sudina M Fr. Baltimore, Md.
No. Name Pos. Cl. Hometown
20 Quinn Carney M Jr. Flemington, N.J.
21 Christie Jenkins M Sr. Media, Pa.
22 Wendy Van Norden A R-So. Germantown, Md.
23 Meredith Egan A Jr. Maplewood, N.J.
24 Megan Kelly M So. Gaithersburg, Md.
25 Meg Carrington D Jr. Charlottesville, Va.
26 Debbie Wheat A So. Laytonsville, Md.
27 Becky Shank D R-Jr. Arnold, Md.
28 Katie Sommar D Fr. North Wales, Pa.
29 Niav Hughes A Fr. Rutherford, N.J.
30 Kim Blouin G So. Annapolis, Md.
31 Danielle Markette D Sr. Boothwyn, Pa.
32 Alexis Venechanos G Fr. Yorktown, N.Y.
33 Alex Kahoe G Sr. Villanova, Pa.
34 Katie Robinson A So. Davidsonville, Md.
36 Virginia Solomon G Fr. McLean, Va.
39 Cara Gorman G Fr. Amsterdam, N.Y.
Head Coach: Cindy Timchal
Assistant Coaches: Gary Gait, Sarah Forbes, Cathy Nelson
2000NCAA Champions 21-1
Maryland’s Championship Teams
5-time ACC Champions • 1997 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 200310-time National Champions • 1981 • 1986 • 1992 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001
Championship Tradition 57
ALL-TIME RECORD BOOK • 2004 MARYLAND WOMEN’S LACROSSE
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