Entering the Team USA Fall Classic, James Madison coach Shelley Klaes-Bawcombe was fielding numerous questions regarding her team’s identity in 2019 after her team’s first-ever national championship in 2018.
“So many questions coming into the game [were] fired at me about who we are, and to be honest, we don’t know who we are yet,” Klaes-Bawcombe said. “This is our first competitive opportunity.”
The Dukes stunned the lacrosse world with wins over Virginia, Florida, North Carolina and Boston College to claim last year’s NCAA Division I crown. But they enter the spring without their star seniors, including Tewaaraton finalist Kristen Gaudian, who traded in her purple and gold for the red, white and blue on Saturday. She was one of 10 college graduates from the 2018 season that played with the U.S. women’s national team for the event on Tierney Field.
With Gaudian’s graduation, James Madison lost their leader in goals and points. Assist leader Katie Kerrigan, draw specialist Haley Warden, who also topped the charts in caused turnovers, and its scrappiest player in Elena Romesburg, who tallied the most ground balls, also donned caps and gowns. Also missing were senior defensive stalwarts in Corinne Schmidt and Rebecca Tooker.
JMU, which just started full-field drills last week, welcomed 10 freshmen to replace a program-changing senior class with hopes of grooming the Dukes back into a national championship contender.
Facing Team USA, Klaes-Bawcombe was unsure of her team’s abilities in the midfield, losing its top three players in draw controls (Warden, Gaudian and Romesburg). She also questioned the Dukes’ speed and stick skills in comparison with the nation’s top players, as she said they had been “rambunctious” in their first few fall ball practices, failing to finish shots.
But to many people’s surprise, including the Dukes themselves, JMU played toe-to-toe with Team USA in a 14-10 loss over five periods.
“Coming out and performing the way that we did today is going to let them let last year go a little bit quicker so they can focus on what this team can be,” Klaes-Bawcombe said.
PHOTO BY JOHN STROHSACKER
The James Madison sideline gets pumped up as it gains the lead against Team USA.
Here’s why James Madison is feeling confident for the 2019 season:
1. The Dukes did not focus on the result.
James Madison recorded just one loss in 2018, 15-12 to 2017 NCAA champion Maryland. Despite having a one-goal edge in the second half against the Terps, the Dukes never saw a lead in their favor except four minutes into the game.
When the Dukes focus on the scoreboard, rather than their play, they dig themselves a hole. Thinking of a tough opponent more than their own team dynamic also causes a shift in mentality. When playing Team USA, a hand-picked roster featuring the best players in the country including NCAA champions, Tewaaraton winners and gold medalists, Klaes-Bawcombe made it clear from the get-go that the end result wasn’t the focus.
“Historically, this is a tough game,” she told Lax Sports Network. “I didn’t want to focus on the result. We’ve never been good when we do that. I think it creates performance pressure. More so, what feedback can we get? How can we maximize this opportunity today? When we focus on the process and how we’re going to do that, we play loose, we play free and we put a great product out on the field.”
With their eyes off the scoreboard, the Dukes assisted on 60 percent of their goals and out-hustled Team USA on ground balls, winning the battle 26-21.
“We have retained speed, we retained lacrosse IQ and we’re a total team sharing the ball over the field,” Klaes-Bawcombe said. “It’s being able to understand what you’re capable of instead of focusing on your playing. … We shared the ball better than I thought we might in the first play action that we had this year, considering we really did graduate quite a bit.”
"I was really impressed with JMU," added Team USA midfielder Taylor Cummings. "They did not come out fearful or scared. They came out like the defending national champions.
PHOTO BY JOHN STROHSACKER
Freshman midfielder Mairead Durkin squares off with Team USA's Taylor Cummings on the draw.