In a rematch of last year’s NCAA tournament semifinal, reigning national champion and sixth-ranked James Madison dropped its 2019 season opener to No. 3 North Carolina, 18-7. The win marked the biggest margin of victory in the series.
"We were playing the defending national champions, who started our season last year with a loss and ended our season with a loss," UNC coach Jenny Levy said. "We obviously have a tremendous amount of respect for them and their program and what they've accomplished. To start the year going against a great opponent and playing as well as we did today is a great starting point for us."
The Tar Heels shut out the Dukes for the first eight minutes, allowing for a quick 4-0 lead. UNC’s dominant performance on the draw dictated the game as senior Gianna Bowe and freshman Brooklyn Neumen led the charge with nine and eight draw controls, respectively, for the 22-5 advantage. Ally Mastroianni added four.
“I was really impressed with our draw unit today,” Levy said. “I thought they did a great job even though there are a lot of new faces there for us. I think the momentum of the game was set with what our guys did on draws because we got the first three draws and scored three goals off that.”
Ten different players recorded at least one point for the Tar Heels. Katie Hoeg had a team-high nine points with six helpers and Jamie Ortega was the Tar Heels’ leading scorer with five goals.
JMU senior Hanna Haven tallied three points, while juniors Maddie McDaniel and Logan Brennan scored two goals apiece. Senior Caroline Sdanowich led defensively with four ground balls and three caused turnovers.
"They dominated the draw and it was hard for us to earn possession,” said Dukes coach Shelley Klaes-Bawcombe. “Our defense did a decent job considering how much UNC was in the offensive end, but the reality is we need more on offense.”
Redshirt sophomore goalie Molly Dougherty had nine saves for the Dukes, while sophomore Taylor Moreno had 10 stops for the Tar Heels.
Kent Shines in Return
Attacker Kenzie Kent is back and better.
In its 20-6 rout of Boston University, Kent led top-ranked Boston College with nine points on five goals and four assists. Her performance was just one point shy of matching her career-best.
The Eagles got off to a hot start with a 6-0 run, kickstarted by Kent less than a minute in. Their nine-goal spurt in the second half sealed the victory.
Sam Apuzzo, the 2018 Tewaaraton winner, had 11 draw controls and four points with a hat trick. Cara Urbank also tallied four points, all goals.
Carter Sets Career Mark
In Penn State’s 13-7 upset victory over No. 10 Towson, senior attacker Madison Carter tallied five points, with four goals, to reach the 200-point mark in her career. She is the 15th player in program history to achieve that feat. With 202 career points on 184 goals and 18 assists, Carter ties Mackenzie and Madison Cyr for 11th.
Carter’s performance anchored a second-half comeback for the No. 14 Nittany Lions after trailing 4-3 at the break. Kayla Brisolari added four points and Kristin Roberto had five draw controls.
The Tigers got a team-best four points from Kaitlin Thornton.
Virginia Overcomes Tight Battle
Overcoming a 4-1 Navy lead 22 minutes in, No. 17 Virginia defeated the No. 16 Midshipmen 15-12 behind a seven-point performance from Avery Shoemaker and seven draw controls from Maggie Jackson.
Navy outshot Virginia 30-26, snagged more draw controls 16-13 and had an even 18-18 ground ball battle. The Midshipmen got five points each from Kelly Larkin and Kayla Harris.
Cavaliers keeper Charlie Campbell recorded 12 saves.
"Navy did a great job of making us work for everything, making every possession count and really making every ground ball as hard as it could possibly be,” Virginia coach Julie Myers said. “I'm really excited we rose to the challenge against great competition and we came up with the win."