US Lacrosse Magazine released the Nike/US Lacrosse Division I Women’s Preseason Top 20 on Jan. 2. Team-by-team previews will be unveiled on uslaxmagazine.com through the end of the month and will also appear as part of the magazine’s NCAA preview edition in February.
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No. 2 Maryland
2018 Record: 20-2 (6-0 Big Ten)
Coach: Cathy Reese (13th year at Maryland)
All-Time Record: 710-136-3
NCAA Appearances: 34
Final Fours: 26
Championships: 13
Cathy Reese isn’t going to get much sympathy from her coaching colleagues, but the reality is that the bar has been set so high at Maryland that it almost seems as if anything other than winning a national championship is a failure.
“It does start to feel that way,” Reese said. “Last year we lost two games, won our conference championship and made it to the final four, but that last game always stings for any coach.”
Maryland’s 2018 season ended with a 14-plus minute scoring drought in the NCAA semifinals as Boston College scored the final two goals to post a 15-13 victory in a game in which Maryland jumped out to a 5-1 lead in the opening eight minutes.
That ending certainly stung, but Reese’s success has been built on both amazing talent and a family-like culture that worries less about other people’s expectations and more about their own aspirations.
Maryland, in 2019, is very much a threat to get back to the top of the pecking order.
“We have people who are really motivated, a bunch of players who are really hungry,” Reese said. “Most importantly, they love the sport and love the team. Our chemistry is good.”
Maryland was uncharacteristically young last season — starting just three seniors and only two that had been with the program for four years. Replacing all-time leading scorer Megan Whittle will be tough, but this is a very deep Maryland team that also welcomes an impact transfer in senior Erica Evans, who rewrote Canisius’ record book before sitting out the 2018 season following an ACL injury.
Evans will boost a midfield that already includes First Team All-American Jen Giles, an 83-point scorer last year, and Grace Griffin, who scored 30 goals as the Terps top freshman last year. Megan Siverson, a Third Team All-American at Louisville in 2017, figures to settle into an even bigger role this year after notching 23 goals and 63 draw controls in her first year at Maryland. Freshman Hannah Glaros, the younger sister of former Terp All-American Beth Glaros, should be a factor in the midfield as well.
Siverson and Kali Hartshorn (139 draw controls) helped the Terps dominate possession by winning over 60 percent of its draws, and they’ll continue to be a strength on the circle.
Whittle and classmate Taylor Hensh combined for 119 goals last season, but Maryland has plenty of returning weapons on attack with Second Team All-American Caroline Steele (59 goals), Hartshorn (38 goals), Brindi Griffin (21 goals), and freshman Julia Hoffman, an All-Metro player from national power McDonogh, all figuring into the mix.
On the defensive end, Maryland should be very stout. Senior goalie Megan Taylor is in her fourth year as a starter. She was the nation’s top goalie in 2017 and had another very solid season last year with a save percentage near 48 percent. She’ll play behind an experienced defensive unit that includes three returning starters — Julia Bragg, Lizzie Colson and Meghan Doherty. Bragg was a First Team All-American and Colson earned Third Team honors.