After Virginia took that 3-1 lead, the UNC senior won the ensuing draw control and came down and took a shot that went high but the draw-to-shot play seemed to pick her teammates up and within two minutes the Tar Heels had tied the score, 3-3 on goals from Kara Klages and Olivia Ferrucci.
Then, after 10 scoreless minutes when neither side could find momentum and the heat began to take its toll on UVA’s defense, Bowe made a play that put UNC ahead for good. Though Virginia held a man-advantage due to a North Carolina foul, Bowe out-scrapped two defenders for a groundball just outside UVA’s crease, then, while falling to the ground, fired a shot past Campbell.
The goal put the Tar Heels up 4-3, and seemed to cause UVA’s defense to slacken slightly, allowing UNC to score two more quick goals to go up 6-3. Carolina even had a chance for more before halftime as a UVA dropped ball turned into back-to-back open shots. Campbell saved one, then Bowe fired high just before halftime.
For UNC, Bowe’s emergence as a do-it-all midfielder is the final step in a career-long progression. As a freshman, she was an instant offensive star playing attack, but moved to midfield, Levy says, because “we wanted her energy on the field.” As a junior, playing with a line of now-departed high scoring midfielders, “she got all the loose balls and did the scrappy stuff we needed. Now she’s playing as a full middie.”
“Whatever my team needs at a certain time I’m willing to do,” said Bowe.
Despite Campbell’s effort in goal before halftime, UNC quickly ended any hopes of an upset after halftime, running the score up to 12-3 before the teams traded goals in the final 10 minutes as the Tar Heels began to substitute. That included a spinning, razzle-dazzle of a goal when Ida Farinholt jumped to catch a feed from Ortega in front of the goal and spun nearly all the way around to score.
“When Carolina started scoring, I think our attack got sticky,” said Myers. “We stopped moving and sharing the ball and that made us very easy to defend.”
For UNC, Ortega ended up matching Bowe’s total of three goals, as did Scottie Rose Growney. Olivia Ferrucci and Katie Hoeg had four assists.
For Ortega and Hoeg, the totals continue unprecedented seasons. Ortega heads to the final weekend with UNC season records of 76 goals and 105 points, while Hoeg’s afternoon put her over 100 points for the season, including 69 assists. The two are UNC’s first 100-point scorers.
North Carolina will play Boston College in them NCAA semifinals on Friday, a rematch of April’s ACC championship game in which the Tar Heels handed the Eagles their only loss of the season. Boston College beat Princeton 17-12 today in the quarterfinals.
For Virginia’s Myers, the loss meant the final game coaching the senior class.
“They’re so much more than a game,” she said. “What they’ve done on and off the field has been so exceptional from a leadership point of view. I couldn’t be more appreciative and grateful for who they are as people and what they were able to accomplish in their four years. On the field they’re warriors. They were taped up to make sure they could make it through a game. If we could, we would practice again tomorrow.”