University of Maryland Athletics

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Women's Lacrosse

No. 3 Maryland Women’s Lacrosse Heads to Johns Hopkins Thursday

No. 3 Maryland (10-0, 2-0) vs. No. 7 Johns Hopkins (10-1, 3-0)
March 26, 2026
Homewood Field
4:00 p.m.
Centennial Network
COLLEGE PARK, MD -- No. 3 Maryland women's lacrosse travels to Johns Hopkins on Thursday for a matchup with the 10–1 Blue Jays. The Terps and Blue Jays will face off at 4 p.m. on the Centennial Network.
 
Where We've Been
  • Maryland enters Thursday's road matchup with a 10–0 record, opening the season with three ranked wins over No. 13 Syracuse, No. 12 Virginia, and No. 14 Princeton.
  • Offensively, the Terps have been led by Kori Edmondson and Lauren LaPointe, who have tallied 27 and 32 goals, respectively. Fourteen players have scored through 10 games, and five have recorded 15 or more points this season.

  • Defensively, 2026 Tewaaraton Watch List member JJ Suriano has started strong in goal to open the year. The junior is 10-0 with 103 total saves, including 16 against ranked No. 13 Syracuse and 13 saves against No. 12 Virginia.
Lexi Dupcak and Keeley Block celebrate a goal vs USC at SECU Stadium
Lexi Dupcak and Keeley Block combined for five goals in Sunday's 13-7 win over USC.
 lapointe's hot start 
  • Lauren LaPointe has had a stellar start to her junior season. Through 10 games, she has recorded 32 goals and 49 points, already surpassing her total from last season.
  • Against Oregon, Lauren delivered a career performance, scoring a career-high six goals and tallying a career-high seven points to help Maryland earn its first-ever win in Eugene, 15–7.
  • LaPointe has recorded four or more points in nine of the ten games so far this year.
Lauren LaPointe against James Madison at SECU Stadium
Lauren LaPointe has scored four or more goals four times this season. 
tewaaraton watch list
  • Kristen Shanahan was added to the Tewaaraton Award Watch List, as announced by the Tewaaraton Foundation in the first round of additions to the list.
  • Shanahan has made an immediate impact in her first season with Maryland women's lacrosse. She ranks second on the team with 37 points and 16 assists, while adding 21 goals.Her four goals against Georgetown Hoyas women's lacrosse helped Maryland erase a four-goal deficit. In her first home game with the Terps, she recorded a career-high six assists.
  • Kori Edmondson, Kayla Gilmore and JJ Suriano were named to the initial Tewaaraton Watch List, as announced by the Tewaaraton Foundation before the season.
  • Edmondson has been all over the field during her senior season and currently ranks third on the team with 36 points, including 27 goals and nine assists. Edmondson is also second on the team with 36 draw controls.
  • JJ Suriano has had a stellar start to her junior season. She currently ranks first in the conference in saves per game (8.62), total saves (103), and save percentage (.551). Suriano currently ranks first in the country in save percentage. 
  • On Februrary 6,  Suriano was named the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week and the IWLCA Defensive Player of the Week. She was also named to the Tewaaraton Watch List and earned a spot on the Big Ten Players to Watch List before the season.
  • Kayla Gilmore leads the team with 64 draw controls and ranks fourth on the team in ground balls with nine.
  • Maryland has won eight of the last 13 Tewaaraton awards, with Megan Taylor becoming the first goalie in lacrosse history to win the award in 2019. Before that, Zoe Stukenberg took home the prestigious award in 2017, Taylor Cummings won three straight from 2014-16 and Katie Schwarzmann became the first two-time winner for Maryland in 2012-13. Caitlyn McFadden started the eight-for-13 streak for Maryland, garnering the award in 2010. Jen Adams won the inaugural Tewaaraton in 2001.
  • In the 19 years of the award, Maryland has won nine times, the most of any school and has had 26 finalists, including at least one in 19-of-20 seasons under head coach Cathy Reese. Most recently, Aurora Cordingley was named a finalist in 2022, where she totaled 118 points (67 goals, 51 assists).
Kristen Shanahan clears a ball against James Madison at SECU Stadium
Kristen Shanahan was added to the Tewaaraton Watch List for the first time in her career. 
Edmondson Moving Up The Charts
  • With five points against USC on Sunday, Kori Edmondson moved into 32nd place on Maryland women's lacrosse's all-time career points list.
  • Edmondson recorded her 100th career goal against No. 3 Northwestern last season. 
    Edmonson on Maryland's Career Points List
    1. Betsy Elder (1991-94) - 199
    2. Grace Griffin (2018-22) - 199
    3. Kori Edmondson (2023-pres.) - 194
    4. Karen Trudel (1981-85) - 185
    5. Acacia Walker (2002-05) - 185
  • Edmondson is also climbing the program's all-time goals list. With three goals against USC, she moved into 16th place. 
    Edmondson on Maryland's Career Goal List
    1. Jen Giles (2016-19) 179
    2. Allison Comito (1998-01) 176
    3. Zoe Stukenberg (2014-17) - 175
    4. Kori Edmondson (2023-pres) - 165
Kori Edmondson celebration shot against #12 Virginia at SECU Stadium
Kori Edmondson has recorded a point in 43 straight games dating back to May 10, 2024.
Dominance Under Reese
  • Head Coach Cathy Reese is in her 20th season at the helm of Maryland women's lacrosse. The winningest coach in program history, Reese is 356-53 (.870) as head coach and has led the Terps to five National Championships, 12 Final Fours, and 22 Conference Championships.
  • Reese is the fifth all-time winningest active head coach and the sixth-winningest coach of all-time in Division 1 women's lacrosse at 386-82 (.825). Former Maryland head coach Cindy Timchal is the all-time winningest women's lacrosse coach with 603 wins.
  • Reese has the highest winning percentage of any current Maryland head coach as a Terrapin head coach.
    1. Cathy Reese (WLax): 356-53 (.870)
    2. Missy Meharg (FH): 665-180-9 (.784)
    3. Brenda Frese (WBB): 631-178 (.780)
    4. John Tillman (MLax): 198-60 (.767)
    5. Sasho Cirovski (MSoc): 451-180-76 (.692)
  • Maryland is 182-12 (.936) at home under Reese, with eight undefeated home campaigns in the last 11 seasons (2013, '14, '15, '16, '17, '18, '19, '21).
Cathy Reese
Cathy Reese is the fifth all-time winningest active head coach and the seventh-winningest coach all-time in Division 1 women's lacrosse at 386-82.
winningest program in women's lacrosse
  • Maryland is the winningest program in women's lacrosse, currently standing with a 813-168-3 record all-time. The Terps have won 82.8-percent of their games all time, also the highest winning percentage of all-time. With a win against No.8 Johns Hopkins, 13-11, in its regular season finale on Saturday. This was Maryland's 800th program win, the most by any women's college lacrosse program.
    1. Maryland: 813-168-3 (.828)
    2. Loyola (MD): 607-293-8 (.673)
    3. Penn State: 600-318-5 (.653)
    4. Virginia: 594-280-5 (.679)
    5. James Madison*: 575-345-3 (.625)
    6. * includes 3 seasons at D-II and 5 seasons undefined at stats.ncaa.org
  • Head Coach Cathy Reese is the fifth all-time winningest active head coach and the seventh-winningest coach of all-time in Division 1 women's lacrosse at 386-82. Former Maryland head coach Cindy Timchal is the all-time winningest women's lacrosse coach with 602 wins.
    1. Cindy Timchal (NU, Maryland, Navy): 603-167 (.783)
    2. Jenny Levy (North Carolina): 452-130 (.777)
    3. Amanda O'Leary (Yale, Florida): 429-130 (.767)
    4. Kelly Amonte Hiller (Northwestern): 394-97 (.802)
    5. Cathy Reese (Denver, Maryland): 386-82 (.825)
2017 NCAA Women's Lacrosse Championship Celebration
Maryland celebrates capping a perfect 23-0 season in 2017 with the program's 15 national championship.
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Players Mentioned

Lexi Dupcak

#22 Lexi Dupcak

M
5' 6"
Junior
Kori Edmondson

#14 Kori Edmondson

M
5' 8"
Senior
Kayla Gilmore

#5 Kayla Gilmore

M
5' 10"
Sophomore
Lauren LaPointe

#8 Lauren LaPointe

A
5' 9"
Junior
JJ Suriano

#30 JJ Suriano

G
5' 3"
Junior
Kristen Shanahan

#3 Kristen Shanahan

A
5' 9"
Graduate Student
Keeley  Block

#6 Keeley Block

A
5' 3"
Graduate Student

Players Mentioned

Lexi Dupcak

#22 Lexi Dupcak

5' 6"
Junior
M
Kori Edmondson

#14 Kori Edmondson

5' 8"
Senior
M
Kayla Gilmore

#5 Kayla Gilmore

5' 10"
Sophomore
M
Lauren LaPointe

#8 Lauren LaPointe

5' 9"
Junior
A
JJ Suriano

#30 JJ Suriano

5' 3"
Junior
G
Kristen Shanahan

#3 Kristen Shanahan

5' 9"
Graduate Student
A
Keeley  Block

#6 Keeley Block

5' 3"
Graduate Student
A