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University of Maryland Athletics

No. 1 Princeton Up Next For Terp Women Laxers

No. 1 Princeton Up Next For Terp Women Laxers

April 27, 2004

  • Complete Release (PDF)
  • ACC Release (PDF)
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    Terps Face Tough Tests In Princeton and Loyola

  • The fourth-ranked Maryland women's lacrosse team will look to rebound after a tough loss at the ACC Tournament to Virginia against No. 1 Princeton and No. 3 Loyola. Fans can catch both games on www.wmucsports.com, and the game against Loyola will be broadcast on 88.1 FM as well.
  • Maryland (12-3) had its 10-game winning streak snapped by Virginia at the ACC Tournament. The winning streak has bookend losses to Virginia (3/9 and 4/23).
  • Speaking of winning streaks, Princeton (14-0) is undefeated this year and is currently riding a 23-game winning streak dating back to last season. The Tigers are the consensus No. 1 team in the nation and have been throughout the season.
  • From 1994-2003, Maryland or Princeton have captured the national title.
  • Loyola (13-2) is also one of the top teams in the nation with losses to only Princeton and Virginia on the year.
  • Including the games this week, Maryland will have played every team that was in the Final Four last season (Virginia, Princeton and Loyola) and the nation's No.1, No. 2 and No. 3 teams, consecutively.
  • Maryland has two-game losing streaks against Princeton and Loyola.

    The Week That Was

  • Kirah Miles stopped 17 shots and the Terp defense held ACC Player of the Year Amy Appelt to just two goals, but it wasn't enough as Maryland fell 9-7 to Virginia last Friday in the ACC Semifinals.
  • The Terps fell behind early when UVa's Caitlin Banks found the back of the net at 28:09, but Maryland rattled off the next five goals to take a 5-1 lead with 7:33 left in the first half. In that surge, Kelly Coppedge netted a free-position goal, Delia Cox tallied a pair of scores, and Greta Sommers and Annie Collins found the back of the net for the Terps.
  • Appelt was held scoreless in the first half trying to fight through Greta Sommers and double teams. She managed seven total shots, but Miles was able to stop all three of Appelt's shots on goal -- including one free-position. The Terps led 6-3 at the half.
  • Appelt wasn't held down for long, though, helping to ignite Virginia in the second half. She scored just two minutes into the second half and added another goal just :46 later to make the score 6-5. Tyler Leachman tied the score at 6-6, then Morgan Thalenberg gave Virginia the lead at 19:26. The Cavs capped their 7-0 run over 22:41 minutes with goals by Banks and Ashleigh Haas to take a 9-6 lead.
  • After a Terp timeout, Laura Warren stopped the Maryland scoring drought with a shot from five yards out in front of the cage to cut the deficit to two goals with 10:26 remaining in the game. Maryland appeared to make it a one-goal game, but an offsides call disallowed a Maryland score and gave Virginia the ball. The Terps also had another good opportunity on a free-position shot but could not convert.

    Accolades

  • Despite finishing 1-3 in the ACC, the Terps still placed five players on the all-conference team, the most of any team in the league.
  • Kelly Coppedge was named to the All-ACC team for the third time in her career, while senior Annie Collins, juniors Acacia Walker and Greta Sommers, and sophomore Delia Cox all earned their first selections to the team.
  • Freshman Mollie Reese -- the only freshman starter for Maryland this year -- was named the ACC's Freshman of the Year. Reese is just the second Terp to be named Freshman of the Year, with Alex Kahoe earning that honor in 1997.
  • For their efforts in a losing cause against Virginia at the ACC Tournament, Delia Cox and Kirah Miles were named to the ACC All-Tournament team. Cox led the Terps with two goals against the Cavs, while Miles was stellar in goal stopping 17 Virginia shots.

    Scouting The Tigers

  • The Tigers have tremendous balance on both offense and defense. Princeton has a pair of 50-point scorers in Lindsey Biles (42-13-55) and Theresa Sherry (41-12-53) -- both of whom are Tewaaraton nominees along with Elizabeth Pillion (24-14-38). The Tigers are the only team to have three players on the list of 20 nominees for the Tewaaraton.
  • Sherry, who also plays varsity soccer at Princeton, is able to contribute in a variety of ways. She is among the team leaders in goals, assists, points, ground balls, draw controls and caused turnovers.
  • Princeton has six players with at least 20 points on the year.
  • As potent as the Tiger offense has been, their defense has been just as dominant. Princeton has allowed double-digit goals just once this season (to Cornell) and opponents are averaging just 6.29 goals per game. As impressive, the Tigers are outshooting opponents by an average of 12 shots per game. Goalie Sarah Kolodner is first in the nation in goals-against average (6.04) but has only had to make 90 saves this season. As a team, Princeton ranks first nationally in scoring offense and scoring defense.
  • In its last two games, Princeton has outscored its opponents 34-15. The Tigers have victories over Loyola, Virginia, Duke, Georgetown, Penn State and Dartmouth this year. Maryland has wins over Georgetown, Penn State and Dartmouth, and lost to both Duke and Virginia (twice).
  • Maryland leads the all-time series 17-5, but the Terps have lost two straight to Princeton, including a lopsided 13-6 defeat in 2003.

    The Last Time: Princeton 13, Maryland 6
    COLLEGE PARK, Md. (April 30, 2003) - The University of Maryland women's lacrosse team suffered its worse defeat of the 2003 campaign in falling to No. 6 Princeton, 13-6, at Ludwig Field.

    Princeton was solid from start to finish, employing a strategy used frequently against the Terrapins over the years, a methodical, ball-control offense and solid defense. But the Tigers succeeded where others have not, mixing a relatively mistake-free offense with success on draws. Princeton won 13-of-21 draws in the game, marking just the third time this year that a team has won more draws that the Terps.

    Second-ranked Maryland actually opened scoring in the game as sophomore Annie Collins ran in an unassisted goal at 11:27. Princeton answered less than a minute later but sophomore Jessica Dorney put the Terrapins back on top with an unassisted goal of her own at 13:17.

    Scoring remained slow for the first 20 minutes and Maryland maintained its 2-1 lead, but the Tiger offense came alive when the clock hit 10:00 in the first half. Whitney Miller got things started with a pair of goals that kicked off a four-goal Tiger run with Lindsey Biles scoring the other two in a four minute stretch. Terp junior Kelly Coppedge found the net on an unassisted goal with 2:38 left in the half and freshman Delia Cox followed with another goal :30 later on a feed from senior Julie Shank and the two teams would head to the half with a goal separating them (5-4 Princeton).

    When Coppedge was able to finish after a pass from Acacia Walker at 30:31, the Terps looked like they were back on track with the score knotted at five. Three minutes later, Princeton would start a run that would dampen the Maryland hopes.

    Leigh Slonaker scored three goals in a five-goal Tiger run that moved the score from 5-5 to 10-5 in Princeton's favor and just nine minutes remained on the clock. Coppedge would net her third goal of the game with 5:25 left, but the Tigers continued to win draws and play keep away while drawing the Terrapin defense away from the net which gave Princeton opportunities to tack on three more for the final seven-goal margin.

    The Terps were led by Coppedge's three goals while Collins, Cox and Dorney each added a goal. Senior Alexis Venechanos also finished with seven saves and it was just the second complete game this year that she had less saves than goals allowed.

    In Maryland's 12 Victories...

                            MARYLAND         OPP
    SHOT STATISTICS
    Goals-Shot attempts     188-433          88-251
    Goals scored average    15.67            7.33
    Shot pct.               .434             .351
    Shots/Game              36.1             20.9
    Assists                 84               33
    GOAL BREAKDOWN
    Total Goals             188              88
    Free-position           35               15
    Unassisted              105              55
    Overtime                0                0
    GROUND BALLS            372              267
    DRAW CONTROLS           184              113
    TURNOVERS               185              219
    CAUSED TURNOVERS        120              87
    CLEARS                  160-194          141-211
    Clear Pct.              .825             .668

    In Maryland's 3 Losses...

                            MARYLAND         OPP
    SHOT STATISTICS
    Goals-Shot attempts     22-73            27-92
    Goals scored average    7.33             9.33
    Shot pct.               .301             .293
    Shots/Game              24.3             30.7
    Assists                 8                6
    GOAL BREAKDOWN
    Total Goals             22               27
    Free-position           5                3
    Unassisted              15               22
    Overtime                0                0
    GROUND BALLS            71               67
    DRAW CONTROLS           29               28
    TURNOVERS               47               42
    CAUSED TURNOVERS        23               29
    CLEARS                  36-44            37-46
    Clear Pct.             .818              .804