Navy Midshipmen women's lacrosse

The Navy Midshipmen women's lacrosse team is a NCAA Division I college lacrosse team representing the United States Naval Academy as part of the Patriot League. They play their home games at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland.

Navy Midshipmen women's lacrosse
Founded2008
UniversityUnited States Naval Academy
Head coachCindy Timchal (since 2008 season)
StadiumNavy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium (capacity: 34000)
LocationAnnapolis, Maryland
ConferencePatriot League
NicknameMidshipmen
ColorsNavy Blue and Gold[1]
         
NCAA Tournament Final Fours
2017
NCAA Tournament appearances
2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2017, 2018, 2019
Conference Tournament championships
2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2017, 2018
Conference regular season championships
2010, 2012, 2013

Head Coach

The Midshipmen are led by hall of fame coach Cindy Timchal, who was named the team's inaugural head coach on August 5, 2006 and has guided the team since its 2008 inception. Timchal is the winningest coach in NCAA Division I women's lacrosse history, earning her 500th win on March 31, 2018.[2]

A 1976 graduate of West Chester University, Timchal began coaching as an assistant lacrosse and field hockey coach at the University of Pennsylvania in 1979. Her first Division I head coach gig was at Northwestern University in 1982. She led the Wildcats to 5 NCAA Tournaments in nine seasons. In 1991 Timchal moved to the University of Maryland, where she transformed a school with one national title in its first eight seasons into a national juggernaut. In 16 seasons, Timchal won eight national titles, reached eleven title games, and made the NCAA Tournament every year.

Timchal's Midshipmen made an immediate impact. After coaching the club team to an 18-5 record in 2007, Navy made the jump to Division I the next year and has won at least 13 games in each of its first ten seasons. Navy broke through in 2010, capturing the Patriot League title for its first NCAA Tournament appearance. They beat Sacred Heart in the play-in game before falling to North Carolina in the first round to finish the year 17-4 with a #19 national ranking. This began a stretch of four straight conference titles and NCAA appearances. The Midshipmen won play-in games three years in a row from 2010–12 and added a first-round victory over Monmouth in 2013. For those four years, Navy's dominance in the Patriot League was hardly contested—they went 21-3 in league play with three regular season titles and four tournament titles.

However, Loyola joined the league in 2014, led by its own all-star coach, Jen Adams. Adams was Timchal's star player at Maryland from 1998-2001, as they had captured four straight national titles together and Adams still holds many Maryland scoring records. Loyola instantly dominated the league, winning three straight conference and tournament titles, preventing the Midshipmen from qualifying again from 2014-16. Loyola completed its fourth straight unbeaten Patriot League regular season in 2017, and faced Navy in the tournament final. The Midshipmen stunned the Greyhounds 15-5, ending Loyola's 41-game unbeaten streak against PL teams. This win kicked off a Cinderella run for the Midshipmen, who defeated three teams in the NCAA tournament--#7 Penn, Massachusetts, and #2 North Carolina—before falling 16-14 to fellow underdog Boston College in the national semifinals. Navy's run marked the first time a women's service academy team had made a Division I national semifinal, and the Midshipmen ended the year 18-5, ranked #4 in the final Inside Lacrosse Media Poll and #6 in the IWLCA Coaches Poll.[3]

Individual career records

Reference:[4]

Record Amount Player Years
Goals217Loren Generi2012-15
Assists167Jasmine DePompeo2010-13
Points336Jasmine DePompeo2010-13
Ground balls153Kierstin King2009-12
Draw controls493Loren Generi2012-15
Caused turnovers84Caitlin Mandrin Hill2008-11
Saves375Elaina Ponchione2009-12
Save %.453Elaina Ponchione2009-12
GAA6.87Annie Foky2012-15

Individual single-season records

Record Amount Player Year
Goals77Erin Rawlick2010
Assists71Jasmine DePompeo2013
Points127Jasmine DePompeo2013
Ground balls55Caitlin Mandrin Hill2008
Draw controls153Lauren Generi2015
Caused turnovers38Blake Smith2017
Saves144Elaina Ponchione2009
Save %.484Michelle Verbeeck2012
GAA4.97Annie Foky2014

Seasons

Statistics overview
Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
NCAA Division I (Patriot League) (2008–present)
2008 Cindy Timchal 13-44-2T-3rd
2009 13-54-2T-2nd
2010 17-45-1T-1stNCAA First Round
2011 15-64-23rdNCAA First Round
2012 18-36-01stNCAA First Round
2013 19-26-01stNCAA First Round
2014 14-36-22nd
2015 15-56-23rd
2016 13-67-22nd
2017 18-58-12ndNCAA Semifinal
Total:155-43 (.783)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Postseason Results

The Midshipmen have appeared in 6 NCAA tournaments. Their postseason record, not including play-in games, is 6-6.[5]

Year Seed Round Opponent Score
2010--Play-in
First Round
Sacred Heart
#3 North Carolina
W, 12-2
L, 5-18
2011--Play-in
First Round
Quinnipiac
#1 Maryland
W, 20-5
L, 6-19
2012--Play-in
First Round
Oregon
#5 North Carolina
W, 10-9 (ot)
L, 7-14
2013#8First Round
Second Round
Monmouth
Duke
W, 12-6
L, 5-10
2017--First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinal
Semifinal
#7 Penn
Massachusetts
#2 North Carolina
Boston College
W, 11-10
W, 23-11
W, 16-14
L, 15-16
2018--First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinal
Johns Hopkins
#8 Loyola
#1 Maryland
W, 16-9
W, 19-15
L, 15-17

References

  1. "American Athletic Conference Brand Standards Guide" (PDF). July 11, 2014. Retrieved November 8, 2016.
  2. "Timchal Earns 500th Career Win as Navy Routs Holy Cross". Navy Sports. Retrieved April 7, 2018.
  3. "Cindy Timchal". Navy Sports. Retrieved April 7, 2018.
  4. "2018 Women's Lacrosse Media Guide" (PDF). Navy Sports. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  5. "Division I Women's Lacrosse Championships Records Book" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.