Defensive unit bands together on Senior Day for women's lacrosse
Caileigh Sindall, Sarah Scott, Courtney Waite and Margaret Corzel have shared four years together as a defensive unit on the North Carolina’s women’s lacrosse team.
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Caileigh Sindall, Sarah Scott, Courtney Waite and Margaret Corzel have shared four years together as a defensive unit on the North Carolina’s women’s lacrosse team.
Fetzer Field was still buried under layers of snow Saturday afternoon. Forced to move its game to the adjacent turf of Navy Field instead, the No. 3 North Carolina’s women’s lacrosse team (5-1) knew it would be braving the cold for its matchup against No. 7 Northwestern (3-2). It also knew that this game against Northwestern — in more than just a change in venue — had to be different.
The last time North Carolina women’s lacrosse fans cheered for goals from Brittney Coppa, Sammy Jo Tracy, or Kelly Devlin, the three were on their way to winning a national championship in Villanova, Pa., on May 26, 2013.
When the North Carolina women’s basketball team visited Cameron Indoor Stadium almost a year ago, then Duke junior center Elizabeth Williams scored a career-high 28 points on the Tar Heels.
As the announcer at Fetzer Field counted the clock down to zero during the North Carolina women’s soccer game Sunday in the third round of the NCAA Tournament, senior defender Satara Murray stopped in her place on the field and reluctantly lowered herself to the grass.
It might be a while before Duke fans forget their team’s early NCAA Tournament exit at the hands of No. 14 seed Mercer in March. But for the Blue Devils on the court, last season’s shortcomings are already in the rearview mirror.
No team had ever won four matches in a row against North Carolina women’s soccer program before Florida State did it in the 2013 season.
The North Carolina women’s soccer team was ranked No. 7 in the country, unbeaten in the ACC, and riding a six-game win streak, but the Tar Heels still had to do one thing: defeat an opponent by more than one goal.
Another road game, another ranked opponent and another tightly matched duel to the end.
Why did former North Carolina women’s soccer team stars Crystal Dunn and Kealia Ohai get selected first and second overall in the 2014 National Women’s Soccer League Draft in January?
Senior day for the North Carolina women’s lacrosse team wasn’t just a chance for six veteran seniors to close out their final regular season with the program’s first ever win in Kenan Memorial Stadium .
Trailing Maryland 8-4 midway through the first half, the No. 1 North Carolina women’s lacrosse team was struggling to earn possession of the ball.
For the returning members from last year’s North Carolina women’s lacrosse team, the memory of the last time they faced Maryland is unforgettable.
Carolina family.
The No. 1 North Carolina women’s lacrosse team has a knack for winning.
National championships are usually considered to be a rare, perfect culmination of years of team chemistry, on-the-field experience and off-the-field development.
Freshman attacker Sydney Holman has yet to play a regular season game for the North Carolina women’s lacrosse team, but she has already secured a reputation as a formidable scorer and a valuable addition to the defending national champion Tar Heels.
The North Carolina women’s tennis team might be young this year, but after competing with the best in the nation, the team seems prepared to start the upcoming spring season off strong.
Even though the members of the North Carolina women’s basketball team did not spend Thanksgiving with their families at home, they were thankful to spend the holiday weekend playing basketball in Cancun with one another.
The North Carolina women’s soccer team proved Sunday afternoon that not only can it defeat top-level teams like No. 22 Wake Forest, but it can also come from behind to prevail, even when the offense is struggling to score.