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The Loch-Down: BU, UNH Take Rivalry to Tournament
May 7, 2008
by Clare Lochary, Lacrosse Magazine Online Staff
First-Round Fodder A brief look at the other Division I first-round match-ups, all of which take place Sunday: Notre Dame at No. 1 Northwestern The Wildcats got dinged by NCAA travel policies on this draw. The Irish are hardly the weakest team in the field, so logistics and not lacrosse dictated this match-up. But such is life in non-revenue sports, and Northwestern thumped Notre Dame, 16-2, on April 9 anyway. Vanderbilt at No. 8 Princeton In one of the most intriguing and evenly matched games of the first round, both teams have plenty to prove. The only other time the Commodores and the Tigers met was in the 2004 semifinal - host Princeton won, 11-3 - when this year's seniors were still in high school. Neither program has matched the success of those 2004 squads, a fact that rests heavily with the combined 11 seniors playing in the game. Towson at No. 3 Syracuse Thanks to the highest-scoring offense in Division I (take that, Duke men!), the Orange routed the Tigers, 22-5, on March 19. Katie Rowan and Christina Dove alone combined for 10 goals and doubled up on the entire Towson squad last time, so Syracuse can likely expect victory in its first-ever NCAA tournament home game. Barring any upsets, the Orange could have the chance to avenge its only two losses as it works its way through the bracket, as it would meet No. 4 Virginia in the quarterfinals and No. 1 Northwestern in semifinals. North Carolina at No. 4 Virginia If the Tar Heels want to improve upon their 16-5 regular-season loss to the Cavaliers, they will need a better performance from goalie Amanda Barnes, who allowed 14 goals before head coach Jenny Levy pulled her from the game midway through the second half. Barnes' overall save percentage is .400, but she has started every game. Usually North Carolina's offense (11.81 goals per game) can make up the difference, but that's hard to do against a goalie as good as Virginia's Kendall McBrearty (.515 save percentage). Temple at No. 3 Maryland This game is a rematch of the 1984 Division I women's final, which the Owls won, 6-4. Do not expect a low-scoring chess match this time around, however, as both teams can put up points. But before it can score, Temple has to win the draw away from the Terps' Dana Dobbie, the NCAA's career draw control leader (322). Duke at No. 6 Georgetown Duke When these teams met March 15, the Hoyas' leading scorer, Ashby Kaestner, got a red card with seven minutes left to play in the Blue Devils' 12-11 victory. (Maybe she was just a little over-cranked to play against her sister Christie, a freshman attacker for the Blue Devils?) Even without those seven minutes, Kaestner had two goals and an assist, so Duke can't look past her or the Hoyas if they want to advance in this tournament and break its three-year semifinal curse. Colgate at No. 2 Penn Getting the No. 2 seed despite beating top-seeded Northwestern is probably the best thing that ever happened to Quakers' head coach Karin Brower, who likes her team play with a chip on its shoulder. That said, it would be hard to convince Penn that it's the underdog in this one. The Raiders are 11-9, and needed a 19-18 victory over MAAC champion Marist in the play-in game to slip into the tournament. Contact Clare Lochary at clochary@uslacrosse.org.
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