This article needs to be updated.(November 2023) |
The 2014 ACC women's and men's lacrosse conferences will include Notre Dame and Syracuse after those teams joined the ACC in July 2013. [1] The 2014 ACC women's lacrosse conference will now include eight teams. This will be the only year that the ACC women's lacrosse conference will include these eight teams as Maryland will leave the ACC for the Big Ten at the end of the 2014 season. [2] Boston College plays in the women's ACC conference, but not the men's conference.
The finalists from the 2013 NCAA championship game, Maryland and UNC, are in the ACC conference in 2014. Additionally, Syracuse was in the final four of the 2013 NCAA championship tournament, and UVA and Duke were in the final eight. Syracuse lost to Maryland by a goal in that tournament, while UNC won the championship with a 13-12 victory against Maryland. [3] UNC's victory marked the first championship for that program, and broke Northwestern's two year streak as NCAA champions. Members of the 2014 ACC conference won two of the last four championships, with Maryland beating Northwestern in 2010. Before that Northwestern won five championships in a row. [4]
Duke | Maryland | North Carolina (UNC) | Notre Dame | Syracuse | Virginia (UVA) | Champion | |
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2009 | lost in final four to UNC 7-8 | lost to NW in final 7-21 | lost in elite eight to Maryland 10-12 | NORTHWESTERN (NW) | |||
2010 | beat NW in final 13-11 | lost in final four to NW 10-15 | lost in final four to Maryland 5-14 | MARYLAND | |||
2011 | lost in final to NW 7-8 | lost in final four to NW 10-11 | not in tournament | NW | |||
2012 | lost in final four to NW 7-9 | lost in final four to Syracuse 16-17 | lost in final to NW 6-8 | NW | |||
2013 | lost in 3rd round to Maryland 9-14 | lost in final to UNC 12-13 in OT | beat Maryland in final 13-12 in OT | lost in 1st round to Stanford | lost in final four to Maryland 10-11 | lost to UNC in 3rd round 9-13 | NORTH CAROLINA |
Boston College | 2013 All-American team | Position | Class year in 2014 | Note |
Mikaela Rix | 2nd team | Midfield | Jr. | |
Covie Stanwick | 2nd team | A | Jr. |
Duke | 2013 All-American team | Position | Class year in 2014 | Note |
Kelsey Duryea | 2nd team | G | So. | |
Taylor Virden | 1st team | D | Sr. |
Maryland | 2013 All-American team | Position | Class year in 2014 | Note |
Taylor Cummings | 1st team | M | So. | 2013 ACC Freshman of the Year |
North Carolina | 2013 All-American team | Position | Class year in 2014 | Note |
Abbey Friend | 2nd team | A | Senior | |
Sloane Serpe | 1st team | D | Senior | |
Brittney Coppa | 3rd team | M | Senior | Will miss 2014 season with ACL injury |
Notre Dame | 2013 All-American team | Position | Class year in 2014 | Note |
Barbara Sullivan | 1st team | D | Jr. |
Syracuse | 2013 All-American team | Position | Class year in 2014 | Note |
Alyssa Murray | 1st team | A | Sr. | 2013 finalist for Tewaaraton Award [5] |
Kayla Treanor | 1st team | A | So. | First freshman in school history to earn 1st team all-America honors [6] |
Virginia | 2013 All-American team | Position | Class year in 2014 | Note |
Casey Bocklet | 3rd team | A | Jr. | Transferred to Virginia from Northwestern |
Darien, Ct. | Loomis Chaffee, CT | Notre Dame Prep, Md. | Severna Park, Md. | St. Anthony's, Long Island | St. Mary's, Annapolis | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boston College | Cali Ceglarski, M, Sr. | Kate McCarthy, M, Sr. | Covie Stanwick, A, Jr. | Emily Mata, G, Jr. | Claire Blohm, D, Sr. | Kelly McNelis, A, Sr. |
Duke | Sydney Peterson, A, Sr. | Kerrin Maurer, A, Jr. | ||||
Maryland | Shanna Brady, D, Jr. Annie Lynch, D, So. | Kristen Lamon, A, Jr. Caitlin Crouse, So. | ||||
North Carolina | Caylee Waters, G, Fr. | Devin Markison, A/M, So. | Cassie Ballard, D, Sr. | Maggie Bill, M, Fr. | Megan Ward, G, So. | |
Notre Dame | Hannah Hartman, M, So. Danielle Lukish, D, So. | Julia Giorgio, M, Sr. | ||||
Syracuse | Kirkland Locey, M, Sr. | |||||
Virginia | Kelsey Gahan, D, Jr. Liz Colgan, G, Sr. |
Starters | Other attackmen |
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First offensive midfield in first game | Defensive midfield | Other midfielders (alphabetical) |
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Started in first game | Other defensemen (alphabetical) |
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Name | Note |
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Name | Note |
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Starters | Other attackmen |
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First offensive midfield in first game | Defensive midfield | Other midfielders (alphabetical) |
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Started in first game | Other defensemen (alphabetical) |
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Name | Note |
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Name | Note |
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In the previous season Maryland lost in the final of the NCAA tournament to North Carolina in the third overtime, 12-13. This season Maryland returns 9 of 15 players from that championship game. In comparison, North Carolina returns 12 of 17 players. Maryland was 22-0 going into the final game against North Carolina and had defeated North Carolina twice during the season.
Name | Note |
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Brook Griffin, RJr. (#11) | Started in 2012 and 2013 |
Halle Majorana, So. (#22) | Did not play in the 2013 championship game |
Name | Note |
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Taylor Cummings, So. (#21) | Returning first-team All-American |
Started in first game | Other defensemen (alphabetical) |
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Name | Note |
---|---|
Name | Note |
---|---|
North Carolina won its first championship in 2013 after current head coach Jenny Levy started the school's women's lacrosse program in 1996. In 2014 North Carolina returns 12 of the 17 players in the 2013 championship game. Brittney Coppa, one of UNC's four team captains for 2014 and a three-year starter, will miss the 2014 season after tearing her ACL in January 2014 in a game against the U.S. National Team. [7] Inside Lacrosse ranked UNC's incoming Freshman class as the best in the country. [8]
Name | Note |
---|---|
Abbey Friend, Sr. (#18) | 2nd team All-American in 2013, captain, in 2014 on the Tewaaraton watch list for the first time |
Sydney Holman, Fr. (#10) | Her two older brothers played lacrosse at North Carolina (Marcus graduated in 2013 and Matthew graduated in 2012), her father Brian is an assistant coach of the UNC men's lacrosse team and her mother Laurie is the Director of Operations for the UNC women's lacrosse team. Her father played goalie at Johns Hopkins and her mother played lacrosse at Towson. She was a top 10-ranked recruit in the Class of 2013 and was a four-time team MVP at East Chapel Hill High School. [9] Her high school team won the state championship in her senior year and she set a new state record for career goals. [10] |
Aly Messinger, So. (#27) | Scored three goals in the 2013 NCAA championship game, started 17 of 21 games in 2013, one of her older sisters (Kaitlyn) played lacrosse at UNC and graduated in 2012, her other sister (Dana) played lacrosse at Vanderbilt and graduated in 2006, her uncle Roy Messinger played lacrosse at UNC and won championships in 1981 and 1982, her father played lacrosse at the University of Pennsylvania, [11] on 2014 Tewaaraton watch list |
Name | Note |
---|---|
Paige Hanson, Sr. (#2) | |
Sam McGee, Jr. (#7) | |
Carly Reed, Fr. (#11) | Played in all of UNC's first nine games off the bench, ranked 4th overall freshman in the nation for 2014, [12] scored five goals against Notre Dame |
Lindsay Scott, Jr. (#5) | Identical twin sister of defender Sarah Scott |
Starters | Note |
---|---|
Maggie Bill, Fr. (#22) | Also on the UNC women's soccer team, played in 12 of 25 games in her first year on the soccer team, ranked as the No. 2 incoming freshman in lacrosse, [13] Coach Levy said Bill's high school recruiting video was the best she has ever seen. [14] Scored four goals against Penn on 3/2/14. |
Mallory Frysinger, So. (#1) | Was the only UNC freshman to start every game in 2013 |
Taylor George, Sr. (#23) | Started all games in 2012 and 2013 |
Molly Hendrick, Fr. (#20) | Scored in the first seven games of the 2014 season |
Other midfielders with playing time | Note |
---|---|
Carly Davis, RFr. | |
Devin Markisson, So. |
Starters | Note |
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Margaret Corzel, RJr. (#9) | Team captain for second year |
Mallory Frysinger, So. (#1) | Second-year starter |
Sarah Scott, Jr. (#19) | First year starter |
Sloane Serpe, Sr. (#16) | 1st team All American in 2013, captain for second consecutive season, starter for four years, on 2014 Tewaaraton watch list |
Caileigh Sindall, Jr. (#31) | Returning two-year starter |
Other defenders with playing time | Note |
---|---|
Maggie Auslander, Fr. (#33) | No. 8 ranked recruit [8] |
Stephanie Lobb, RFr. (#34) | |
Courtney Waite, Jr. |
Name | Note |
---|---|
Megan Ward, So. | Started last seven games of the 2013 season |
Caylee Waters, Fr. | Backup to Ward, played in the second half of games to start the 2014 season [15] |
Maggie Bill is a freshman at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who accomplished the rare feat of playing on two varsity college sports teams, the women's lacrosse and soccer teams, that both won national championships in their previous seasons. Bill committed to play both sports in the middle of her sophomore year in high school. [16] She scored 12 goals when she was five years old in her first organized lacrosse game. [17] UNC women's lacrosse Coach Jenny Levy said Bill's high school recruiting video was the best she has ever seen. [18] Bill's soccer team won the state championship in her last two years in high school. She was a first-team All-American in lacrosse in her sophomore year in high school. Bill is the second of six children with two brothers and three sisters. [19]
Soccer: Bill played in 12 of 25 games in her first season at UNC. [20]
Lacrosse: She was the No. 2 incoming freshman in lacrosse in the U.S. [21] and earned a starting spot on UNC's midfield. She practiced with the lacrosse team for two weeks before scoring two goals in a close loss to the U.S. national lacrosse team in an exhibition match. [22] [23] After starting the first game of UNC's lacrosse season, she scored four goals in UNC's sixth game against Penn on March 2, 2014. Womenslax.com named Bill rookie of the week after her performance against Penn. [24]
Maggie Bill played for St. Anthony's High School on Long Island, New York in the Nassau Suffolk Catholic High School League. She was a first-team All-American in lacrosse her sophomore year in high school after missing her soccer season due to a torn ACL. [19] [25] She committed to UNC before her sophomore season in lacrosse. [25] She also played point guard on the basketball team in addition to soccer and lacrosse.
Freshman year: Started on the varsity lacrosse team, suffered a torn ACL in at end of the lacrosse season, lacrosse team won league championship
Sophomore year: missed the soccer season due to a torn ACL, lacrosse team won league championship
Junior year: Won league and state championships in soccer, lacrosse team won league championship, MVP in championship game [26]
Senior year: Won league and state championships in soccer, soccer championship game MVP, lacrosse team won league championship for the sixth straight year. Bill had 65 goals (3.6 per game) and 18 assists (1.0 per game) in lacrosse her senior year. [27]
Starters | Note |
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Cortney Fortunato, Fr. | On her high school varsity lacrosse team for six years, leading team in points after four games |
First offensive midfield in first game | Defensive midfield | Other midfielders (alphabetical) |
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Started in first game | Other defensemen (alphabetical) |
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Name | Note |
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Name | Note |
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Name | Note |
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Devon Collins, Jr. | Started in 21 of 23 games her freshman year |
Kailah Kempney, Jr. | |
Alyssa Murray, Sr. (#1) | Tewaaraton Award finalist after her Junior year. [28] Led Syracuse in points in 2013. |
Taylor Poplawski, Fr. (#19) | Played in first five games off bench and third on team in goals. In high school she was a five-time all-league first team honoree. |
Kayla Treanor, So. (#21) | First freshman on women's lacrosse team at Syracuse to be named first team All-American. [28] Leading Syracuse in points after five games in 2014. Scored seven goals for the US national team against UNC in an exhibition match in January 2014 [29] |
Name | Note |
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Amy Cross, Sr. | Sister Kelly Cross (So.) is on the team |
Gabby Jaquith, Jr. (#20) | |
Katie Webster, Sr. | Started every game her freshman year, on 2014 Tewaaraton watch list |
Name | Note |
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Name | Note |
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Natalie Glanell, Sr. | |
Kasey Mock, Sr. | |
Mallory Vehar, Jr. | Brother Griffin was on the Syracuse men's lacrosse team from 2010 to 2013 |
Name | Note |
---|---|
Kelsey Richardson, Jr. |
Starters | Other attackmen |
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First offensive midfield in first game | Defensive midfield | Other midfielders (alphabetical) |
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Started in first game | Other defensemen (alphabetical) |
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Name | Note |
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Name | Note |
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Tobacco Road is a term used in college sports, mainly basketball, for the four rival universities of North Carolina that play in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). The term refers to the area's history as a major tobacco producer. The Tobacco Road teams represent the following universities:
Karen Christina Shelton is an American former field hockey player and coach. Shelton served as head coach of the University of North Carolina's field hockey program from 1981 until her retirement in 2022. She was a member of the U.S. National Team from 1977 to 1984 and a starter on the team that won the bronze medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. She attended West Chester State and was a member of four NCAA championship winning teams. Shelton also qualified for the 1980 Olympic team but did not compete due to the Olympic Committee's boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, Russia. As consolation, she was one of 461 athletes to receive a Congressional Gold Medal many years later.
Robert Fetzer Field was a stadium located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and was the home of the lacrosse and soccer teams of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the North Carolina Tar Heels. The four teams that called Fetzer field their home have a combined total of 26 national championships.
The North Carolina Tar Heels are the intercollegiate athletic teams that represent the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The name Tar Heel is a nickname used to refer to individuals from the state of North Carolina, the Tar Heel State. The campus at Chapel Hill is referred to as the University of North Carolina for the purposes of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Since the school fostered the oldest collegiate team in the Carolinas, the school took on the nickname Carolina, especially in athletics. The Tar Heels are also referred to as UNC or The Heels.
The North Carolina Tar Heels men's lacrosse team represents the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's lacrosse. North Carolina currently competes as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) and plays its home games at Fetzer Field and Kenan Memorial Stadium in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Their main rivalry series is with fellow ACC member Duke.
Elmar Bolowich was most recently head coach of the George Mason Patriots men's soccer team at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, United States. He was previously the head coach of the Creighton Bluejays men's soccer team at Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska for eight years after leaving his 22-year tenure as the head coach of the North Carolina Tar Heels men's soccer team at the University of North Carolina.
The North Carolina Tar Heels men's soccer team represents the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in men's NCAA Division I soccer competition. They compete in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Tar Heels won the NCAA championship in 2001 and 2011.
The North Carolina Tar Heels women's lacrosse team represents the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I women's lacrosse and currently competes as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). The North Carolina women's lacrosse team won the ACC tournament in 2002 and their first Division 1 national championship in 2013.
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Caitlin Van Sickle is an American field hockey coach and former player. From Wilmington, Delaware, she was a standout athlete at Tower Hill School where she was the state's athlete of the year in both field hockey and lacrosse. She played at the collegiate level for the North Carolina Tar Heels from 2009 to 2012, receiving numerous honors including being a three-time All-American and a three-time Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Defender of the Year. She won a national championship with the Tar Heels in 2009 and helped them make appearances at three further.
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The 2021 North Carolina Tar Heels women's soccer team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill during the 2021 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. It was the 45th season of the university fielding a program. The Tar Heels were led by 45th year head coach Anson Dorrance and played their home games at Dorrance Field in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
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The 2023–24 North Carolina Tar Heels women's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the 2023–24 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Tar Heels were led by head coach Courtney Banghart, in her fifth season in Chapel Hill. She was assisted by Joanne Aluka-White, Adrian Walters, and Itoro Coleman. The Tar Heels played their home games at Carmichael Arena, as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
The 2023 North Carolina Tar Heels women's soccer team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill during the 2023 NCAA Division I women's soccer season. It was the 47th season of the university fielding a program. The Tar Heels were led by 47th year head coach Anson Dorrance and played their home games at Dorrance Field in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
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