The No. 5 North Carolina women’s lacrosse team thought it had clinched a win when it led 15-7 with three minutes to play against No. 17 Boston College on Saturday, until something struck the team’s players as funny.
“It was pretty absurd,” senior attacker Corey Donohoe said. “It was on a draw control and Brittney (Coppa) came up with the ball and somehow Kara (Cannizzaro)’s foot ended up in her stick. It was a stick, and a ball, and a foot. She was literally dragging Kara around.”
With the comical tangle up momentarily distracting North Carolina (8-2, 2-0 ACC), the Eagles slipped in three goals in 53 seconds. Even so, the Tar Heels had done enough work on the other end of the field to ensure a 15-10 victory.
“We were looking forward to scoring a 16th goal and finishing the game 16-7 instead of 15-10,” UNC coach Jenny Levy said. “I wasn’t real happy with the last two minutes. We run a draw with a 1:30 left and a funny situation happened on the field.
“And we had a lot of our young kids losing focus. That turnover led to a goal, and we went back to the draw circle, led to another goal and another goal.”
Curiously, the UNC victory came despite the Tar Heels being outshot, winning fewer draw controls and having three more turnovers than Boston College (7-3, 0-3 ACC).
“We were able to score in a multitude of different ways from transition to settled,” Levy said. “I just thought our poise and patience all over the field was very good.”
Starting seniors Mia Hurrin, Katy Fitzgerald, Taylor Chumney and Donohoe exuded composure, completing high-pressure passes despite double coverage and keeping ball movement fast on the outside.
Donohoe drew two BC defenders, which opened scoring opportunities for the rest of the North Carolina attack. With six unassisted goals, the Tar Heels proved they can drive hard to the cage and finish, even while they’re double teamed.