It made 2018 look like the year when BC couldn’t miss. Until, one piece at a time, it did.
First, Kent took the season off to concentrate on hockey and get some much-needed rest. The Eagles are perennial Frozen Four contenders, meaning in 2017, Kent’s in-season demands stretched from the beginning of September through the end of May.
But Apuzzo responded with an astonishing offensive year. She amassed 88 goals, 41 assists and 163 draw controls on the way to becoming BC’s first Tewaaraton winner.
Still, after an undefeated regular season, BC saw its invincibility crack in the ACC championship game, losing to North Carolina. Then came the one-goal loss to upstart James Madison in the NCAA championship game Memorial Day weekend.
Now 2019 becomes the year of the Eagles. For the first time, Apuzzo and Kent join forces for a full season. Moreover, BC added the nation’s No. 1 recruiting class, according to Inside Lacrosse, headlined by a pair of Long Island products in Jenn Medjid and Cassidy Weeks who are top-10 prospects.
“With teams [that didn’t win] like North Carolina and Maryland, the thing to learn is it doesn’t matter how good the individuals are,” Walker-Weinstein says. “If players don’t sacrifice everything for the team, and have ridiculous relationships on the team, you’re not gonna win. It’s always the intangibles and not actual lacrosse.”
All of that, says Hyatt, is on the minds of this year’s seniors and team leaders every day.
“We’d gotten out of that take-it-slow, one-game-at-a-time mindset after our first trip to the national championship as sophomores,” Hyatt says. “Our junior year, they still called us a Cinderella team, though the way we performed in the regular season was a clear identifier we were not. Maryland and UNC always had that target, and that’s what bit them in the butt. We know that every single team we play wants to kick our butts. That’s why we have to stay grounded.”
If BC sits at the top of the lacrosse pyramid today, it started the climb there in 2005 under coach Bowen Holden.
“I’m not surprised at all,” Holden says. “When I took the job in 2005, I felt like I had so many resources and so much going for me. It’s an incredible school that draws great kids and great athletes.”
Holden inherited a program with great potential, but limited success. From 1992-2005, the Eagles amassed a record of 90-122. They struggled in the Big East, going 5-24 during their five seasons in the conference before migrating to the ACC in 2006, Holden’s first season at the helm.
“I never went into a season or game expecting to get our butts kicked and never would have wanted my players to expect that,” Holden says. “We did [get our butts kicked] sometimes, but what I really remember is the athletes there were willing to take on much different expectations put on them.”
Holden left BC in 2012 with a record of 64-60, including winning seasons in her final three years, though her Eagles teams never threatened to win the then-six team ACC. The Eagles made the ACC semifinals and the program’s first NCAA tournament in 2011. After lean early years, her Eagles got the program’s first noteworthy victory in 2008, shocking seventh-ranked North Carolina. Blue-chip recruits like Covie Stanwick and Mikaela Rix, and diamonds in the rough like Kristin Igoe and Sarah Mannelly, helped to turn the tide and set the table for BC’s remarkable rise the last two years.
Holden has watched the Eagles grow into national title contenders while the players she recruited have started careers — Igoe played for Team USA in the 2013 FIL Women’s World Cup — and families. Watching both, she says, has been satisfying to see.
“I get the sense that alums feel they are part of today’s success,” Holden says. “They have a sense that they had a hand in it. The team would not be here today without every woman who went before.”