In Florida, Apuzzo showed a glimpse of what she could do once her college career ends. In a Team USA intra-squad game, she scored twice and doled out two assists to lead her Blue side to a win. Then she scored two more goals against the UWLX all-stars. (In a great sign for Eagles fans, BC’s contingent dominated the weekend stats, with assistant coach Kayla Traynor and senior Dempsey Arsenault scoring four and two goals, respectively, in the Blue-White game and Arsenault leading all scorers with three goals against the UWLX.)
But while Florida foreshadowed Apuzzo’s future, her focus is singularly on the present, her senior season and the pursuit of an NCAA championship. The Eagles, once an afterthought in the ACC, have steadily risen in national prominence, including back-to-back appearances (and losses) in the NCAA championship game.
“We’ve been to the finals two times in a row and we haven’t won,” Apuzzo said. “We are always that blue-collar team, like workhorses, but now it’s like this switched is flipped and we’re the hunted. So now we have a certain swagger.”
Though Apuzzo scored 88 goals in 2018 on her way to becoming BC’s first-ever national player of the year, she believes she’s improved her game, an assessment confirmed by teammate Kenzie Kent.
Kent, the 2017 NCAA championship MVP, skipped the 2018 season to concentrate on hockey. She returned this fall to begin working together with Apuzzo. But she wasn’t quite prepared to see what Apuzzo had done while she was away.
“I learn from her every day,” Kent said.
Kent marveled at a wicked behind-the-back shot her line mate had developed, and the seemingly endless combinations of moves she now routinely showed off.
“Like going up from X,” Kent said, “faking shooting around [the goal] and then pulling back and shooting behind the back.”